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A02178 The workes of the reuerend and faithfull seruant af Iesus Christ M. Richard Greenham, minister and preacher of the Word of God collected into one volume: reuised, corrected, and published, for the further building of all such as loue the truth, and desire to know the power of godlinesse. By H.H.; Works Greenham, Richard.; Holland, Henry, 1555 or 6-1603.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1612 (1612) STC 12318; ESTC S120843 1,539,296 988

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in them a great mourning as the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon for the death of the good King Iosias Euen so must men mourne because they haue pierced Christ through with their sinnes wounded him with their abominations And men must know that a few drie teares when they haue offended are not sufficient repentance or sacrifice to God but they must rent their hearts and be heartily sorie and turne vnto the Lord Now many are so stricken with the sense and feeling of their sinnes that thereby they are moued to confesse and lay open their wickednesse in such sort as a man would thinke them to be such as for euer afterwards would stand in feare to offend the Lord any more but these after that they haue receiued some comfort by the word of their sinnes and haue seene that their sinnes are pardonable not distinguishing between these two that it is one thing to haue their sinnes remissible and another thing to assure themselues that they are remitted After I say this comfort receiued by the preaching of the word they labouring no further to be renewed and throughly reformed although they had some sorrow for a season yet because they did not search themselues more narrowly and endeuour to purge themselues as well from inward sinne as from outward and to be wholy transfigured and transformed into a new holie and righteous life therefore it commeth to passe that the loue of righteousnesse departeth from them and they returne againe to their old by as and are become praies for Iesuites and massing Priests such is their prophanenesse And this is because they rested onely in the vniuersall promises of God which although they bee all most true and comfortable yet they can minister no true comfort and consolation vnto mans soule except hee make a particular application thereof vnto himselfe Lastly some there be who would faine seeme to the appearance of the Church to haue forsaken and sold their sinnes and to haue made a full and perfect reformation of their former liues euilly spent which notwithstanding harbour and nourish sinnes in their hearts which afterward will breake foorth and discouer their hypocrisie and this they doe because they were but a little enlightened with the flash of the holy Ghost and were not throughly reformed inwardly which is euident in this that they couet to approoue themselues more before men than before God nourishing in their hearts secret selfe-loue as in shewing themselues zealous vntill they come to preferment or to this end that many perceiuing their zeale may flocke after them to heare them so they may procure themselues fame whom so soone as Sathan beginneth a little to buffet them they fall away and shew that they had sold sinne but for a season This is contrarie vnto that course which the true ministers of God and those which feare him aright ought to take for it is their dutie to seeke the praise of God and not of themselues to couet the profit of the people of God and not their owne priuate lucre knowing this that they serue not men but God and that they must professe religion religiously setting before their eyes the praise of God the crowne of immortall glorie the saluation of soules and the acceptation of their labour before God And all men must desire rather to be religious than to seeme so giuing themselues to the exercises of priuate praier reading fasting to priuate admonition conference and other priuate duties at such time and in such place when and where they neede not to boast of any thing done seeing it is done in secret which who so doth let him assure himselfe that there is nothing so secret but it shall be reuealed whether it be good or euill If we doe this then shall we not be in the number of those which beginning in the spirit end in the flesh or of those which serue God for a season and in the end fall away from him and his seruice Doublesse it is a strange thing to see some who haue bin themselues a light vnto others so now to shrinke from Gods truth as that they should become Papists or of the Familie of loue or of some other heresie The cause of this is because their inward stuffe was corrupt and not fullie cured by effectuall repentance And thus much of grosse sinnes Now of the infirmities of nature which remaine euer in the best this inward corruption must be sold also for it is not enough to leaue outward and grosse sinnes except also we beate downe the inward corruption of our owne nature and although we cānot altogether blot out this our naturall corruption yet the righteousnesse of Christ may be so resident and dwell in vs that it shall not onely keepe vs from grosse outward outrages and offences but also will holde downe keepe short our naturall corruptions neither must we thinke it enough to sell the fruites of our corrupt nature but we must also sell the corruption it selfe for as we see so long as the tree remaineth there will alwaies spring foorth some buds euen so of the children of God so long as the corruption of the nature raigneth in them so long do they burst out into some offences or other but most men make either little or no conscience at all of these little faults but it must be otherwise with vs or else we cannot but displease God greatly For as a riuer drieth vp vnto the fountaine yet if we doe rest from all emptying of it it will encrease againe So except the children of God doe keepe downe their naturall corruption although they offend not as the reprobate and wicked in monstrous sinnes against God yet they cannot but haue great downfals Wherefore we must not with the woman whereof the Poet speaketh see and behold good and lawfull things and follow that which is euill neither must we be as the Philosophers whose reason fighteth with their appetite but we must fight both with reason and appetite we must be as new creatures borne againe and we must be more willing to endure all shame and reproches than to fall and offend to the dishonour of God Being grieued that we see our selues ready to displease the Lord. The Apostle Paul Rom. 7. saith of himselfe I see another Law in my members rebelling against the Law of my minde and leading me captiue vnto the Law of sinne which is in my members Heere the Apostle sheweth his captiuitie vnto sinne by reason of his inward corruption now when men are in imprisonment or captiuitie then they are fed with the bread of aduersitie and affliction and therefore the Apostle viewing the miserie wherein he was by nature in the type of a true regenerate man saith O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Here he crieth out against himselfe from the truth of his heart as he findeth himselfe
and for the tribes of thine inheritance 4. Fourthly God graunts his seruants the holy meanes of saluatiō namely preaching prayer Sacraments holds backe the efficacie of his spirit for a time In this case they are like the corne field that is plowed and sowed with good corne but yet for a time it neuer giues rooting beneath nor so much as a shew of any blade appeares aboue Thus the spouse of Christ when she comes into his wine-seller she fals into a swowne so as she must be staied with flaggons and comforted with apples because she is sicke of loue 5. Fiftly God giueth his children a strong affection to obey his will but he lets them faile in the act of obedience it selfe like as a prisoner who hath escaped the hand of his Iayler hath an affectiō to run a thousand miles euery houre but hauing happily his bolts on his legges hee cannot for his life but goe very softly gauling and chafing his flesh and with much griefe falling againe into the hands of his keeper This is it that Paul complaineth of when he saith I delight in the lawe of God concerning the inner man but I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind leading me captine to the law of sin which is in my members O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of death This second manner of Gods forsaking of his Elect is when hee hides his graces for a time not by taking them quite away but by couering them by remouing all sense and feeling of them And in this case they are like the trees in the winter season that are beaten with winde weather bearing neither leaf nor fruite but looke as though they were rotten dead because the sappe doth not spread itselfe but lies bid in the roote Dauid often was in this case as namely when he saith Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer Ana will hee shewe no more fauour is his mercie cleane gone for euer Doth his promise faile for euermore Hath God forgotten to be mercifull hath hee shut vp his ●ender mercies in displeasure Selah This comes to passe because the Lord very often in and by one contrarie workes another Clay spittle tempered together in reason should put out a mans eyes but Christ vsed it as a meanes to giue sight to the blind Water in reason should put out fire but Elias when he would shew that IEHOVA was the true God powres water on his sacrifice and fills a trench therewith to make the sacrifice burne The like appeareth in the worke of grace to saluation A man that hath liued in securitie by Gods goodnes hath his eyes opened to see his sinnes his heart touched to feele the huge loath some burden of them and therefore to be waile his wretched estate with bitternes of heart Hereupon hee presently thinks that God will make him a firebrand of hell whereas indeede the Lorde is now about to worke and frame in his heart sanctification and sound repentance neuer to bee repented of The man which hath had some good perswasion of Gods fauour in Christ comes afterward vpon manie occasions to bee troubled to be ouerwhelmed with distrustfullnes grieuous doubtings of his saluation so as he iudgeth himselfe to haue been but an hypocrite in former times for the time present a castaway But indeed hereby the Lord exerciseth fashioneth and increaseth his weake faith In one word marke this point that the graces of God peculiar to the elect are begunne increased and made manifest in or by their contraries A man in this Desertion can discerne no difference betweene himselfe and a cast-away and the rather if with this Desertion be ioyned a feeling of Gods anger for then ariseth the bitterest temptation that euer befell the poore soule of a Christian man and that is a wrastling and strugling in spirit and conscience not with the motions of a rebelling flesh nor the accusation of the Diuell which are oftentimes very irkesome and terrible but against the wrath of a reuenging God This hiddden and spirituall temptation more tormenteth the spirit of man then all the rackes or gibbets in the world can do And it hath his fits after the māner of an ague in which euen Gods own seruants ouercarried with sorrow may blaspheme God and cry out that they are damned Iob was in this estate as hee testifieth Oh that my griefe were weyed saith he and my miseries were layd together in the balla●ce for it would be heauier then the sand of the sea therefore my words are swallowed vp for the arrowes of the Almighty are in me the venome thereof doth drinke vp my spirit the terrours of God fight against me And further he complains that the Lord is his enemy that he sets him as a But to ●●●●●e at This was Dauids temptation when hee said O Lord rebuke mee not in thine anger neither chostise mee in thy wrath haue mercie vpon me O Lord for I am weake O Lord heale me for my bones are vexed my soule is also sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay Returne O Lord deliuer my soule saue me for thy mercies sake Hence it followes that when any that hath bene a professor of the Gospell shall despaire at his ende that men are to leaue secret iudgements to God and charitably to iudge the best of them For example one Maister Chambers at Leycester of late in his sicknesse grieuously despaired and cried out that he was damned and after dyed yet it is not for any to note him with the black marke of a reprobate One thing which he spake in his extremitie O that I had but one drop of faith must moue all men to conceiue well of him For by this it seemeth hee had an heart which desired to repent and belieue and therefore a repentant beleeuing heart indeed For GOD at all times but especially in temptation of his great mercy accepts the will for the deede Neither is it to be regarded that hee said he was damned for men in such cases speake not as they are but as they feele thēselues to be Yea to go further when a professor of the gospell shall make away himselfe though it be a fearefull case yet still the same opinion must be carried First Gods iudgements are very secret 2. They may repent in the very agonie for any thing we know 3 None is able to comprehend the bottomles depth of the graces mercies which are in Christ Iesus Thus much of the manner which God vseth in forsaking his Elect Now followe the kinds of desertion which are two desertion in punishment desertion in sinne Desertion in punishment is when God deferreth either to mitigate or to remooue the crosse and chastisement which he hath laide vpon his children This befell Christ on the crosse My God saith he my God why hast
life and labours in the Church of God yet had I rather be noted of some for want of skill than of any for want of loue and affection to so louing a father I haue knowne his life for many yeeres and reioyce in heart to haue knowne it for that most rare graces of Gods spirit did shine in him all tempered as with faith vnfained vnto Christ so with bowels of compassion and loue towards men In his holy Ministerie hee was euer carefull to auoide all occasions of offence desiring in all things to approoue himselfe as the Minister of Christ he much reicoyced and praised God for the happie gouernment of our most gratious Queene ELIZABETH and for this blessed calme and peace of Gods Church and people vnder it and spake often of it both publikely and priuatly as he was occasioned and stirred vp the hearts of all men what he could to pray and to praise God with him for it continually yea this matter so affected him that the day before his departure out of this life his thoughts were much troubled for that men were so vnthankfull for that strange and happie deliuerance of our most gratious Queene from the dangerous conspiracies and practises of that time He was the speciall instrument and hand of God to bring many both godly and learned to the holy seruice of Christ in his Ministerie and to restraine and to reduce not a few from schisme and error striuing alwaies to retaine such in obedience of lawes and pretiouslie to esteeme and regard the peace of the Church and people of God When God had translated this Elias from vs then I sought to finde him in his workes for they doe liuely expresse the picture of his minde and heart and taste sweetly of that pure fountaine of God from whence they were deriued While he liued his lips often refreshed my soule when he was gone I lamented much that I had not in Christianitie made that vse of him that a Heathen doth of a naturall wise man in humanitie But now I praise God I haue found some good supplie of that which through mine owne negl●gence I wanted for of his workes which were then dispersed farre and neere but now by Gods prouidence the greatest and best part are come into my hands I can say for my content as much as Cyprian could say of his graue ancient and learned Tertullian both for speciall instruction and consolation He was no sooner gone from vs but some respecting gaine and not regarding godlinesse attempted forthwith to publish some fragments of his workes to the griefe that I say no more of many louing friends which haue long desired and expected the impression of all his workes And here could I wish all the godly learned were of M. Francis Iunius iudgement for hee to escape these hucksters handling endeuours wisely in his life time to preuent such a mischiefe For this cause M. D. Crooke a reuerend man for his learning and labour in the Church well deseruing of Gods people for the great loue hee bare him and desiring the good of many pervsed and corrected some part of these workes intending to reuiew the whole Now the Lord hath taken him also from vs and giuen him rest I haue endeuoured what I could to looke ouer the rest of all these workes and here I offer and recommend them to the Church of God in the best manner that I can after some labour and wearines I wanted not the helpe of diuers both godly and learned friends we haue conferred sundrie copies together and by good conference reuised and corrected all The Treatise of Counsels I found most distracted and corrupted Of many hundreds I selected these few and haue reduced them into this alphabeticall order desiring so to dispose them as that euery counsell might be set vnder one speciall head or argument whereunto it seemed to haue most reference As for example all of affections I couched vnder that title AFFECTIONS and all of afflictions vnder that title and so of the rest Of these Counsels I may anouch Christian Reader that thou shalt finde more experienced knowledge and more sound refreshing for thy soule in some one of them than in some one whole Sermon full of humane eloquence and affectation of stile which so many nice eares doe so much admire and yet still be learning and come but to a poore and meane taste and knowledge of the truth When this volume was finished and past the presse in reuiewing the whole for the correction of some verball faults I see and must confesse wee haue offended by our negligence not onely in the words but also in the matter yet so as I trust the louing and Christian readers will accept our endeuour without offence In the Counsels ye haue often this addition he thought this or he said that here I must request thee Christian reader not to iudge any such speeches to proceed from any pride or singularitie for that such obseruations as I suppose were collected and taken by others and not set downe by himselfe If his own hand had giuen these workes the last filing they might haue no doubt a farre more excellent forme and beautie But such were his trauels in his life time in preaching and comforting the afflicted that he could not possiblie leaue these workes as he desired In that one treatise of the Sabbath I found his owne hand with many corrections and yet not answering I am well assured his hearts desire There are foure yeeres past since I first purposed the collection and publishing of all these works Now thou hast good reader an impression of all which hitherto I haue collected in this forme thou seest that so by Gods good prouidence they may the better be reserued as a holy monument for posteritie Concerning which be aduertised againe good Christian that whereas some books serue well for the increase of knowledge in diuine mysteries in the causes and meanes of saluation yet thou must remember not to rest herein for many be rich in knowledge which be very poore and barren in obedience contented onely to looke on the end a farre off and thinking that when like Snailes they creepe in the way they be too forward and make too much haste to follow Christ. And againe whereas others labour much and to good purpose in books of controuersies against all the professed enemies of the Gospell this studie also hath not the like fruit in all sorts of people for howsoeuer some profit much this way the Church of God in the confutation of all the aduersaries of the Gospell yet in very many these bookes helpe little to godlines but rather fill the heads and hearts of men with a spirit of contradiction and contention as our common experience daily teacheth vs. This good seruant of Christ in all these workes doth not onely teach and informe the mind in sundry arguments handled in this volume concerning truth and error that so in iudgement wee might receiue
themselues some thinke their gifts proceed from God but by their owne deserts some acknowledge Gods gifts to be free and vndeserued but they are proud of them 87 It is strange that we should not abide to be threatned and yet can be content to be afflicted when as naturally wee rather desire the lesse euill or we would leuer bee admonished of an euill then punished with an euill Now a threatning forewarnes but plagueth not an affliction punisheth rather than forewarneth Howbeit this bewrayes the great pride of mans heart in that hee had rather be pressed vnder the hand of God than reproued of a man 88 In the estate of mariage choise may well be made of foure things First wee are to looke the woman be religious Secondly that she be chaste Thirdly that she be louing to her husband Fourthly that she be an huswife For other things if God cast them on vs they are not to be refused if we want them we must remēber godlines is the best dowrie 89 As God his children haue the greatest ●l●ssing● so haue they oft the greatest crosses which would seeme strange but that God his wisdome must stay our ranging wits It is good therefore to promise this assurance that we belong to God which will most comfort vs though affliction so belongs to vs. 90 Because a truth may be taught and not an whole truth it comes to passe that many learned men though not of purpose open the doore to many heresies 91 As in receiuing of a purgation a man shall thinke himselfe sicker then in receiuing a cordiall and yet in the end hee is not so so it is incident to troubled mindes to thinke themselues worse in hearing threatnings than in receiuing of the promises and yet it is not so For by hearing of the Law both their title is better to the promises and the promises more appertaine to them 92 As no gift or bribe doth so much whet vp the minde of a good Physition or skilfull Lawyer as to r●lie and rest in their Arte and faithfulnes for which they will doe farre more then for any other thing so there is nothing doth more drawe out more assurance from GOD as when hee seeth that throughly and confidently yet with all humilitie we depend vpon his promise prouidence and power 93 It is a danger to make a priuate offence publike because priuate offences would be priuately admonished Howbeit if we see that notwithstanding our priuate dealing the sinne doth still growe then wee are rather to make some hole into the same than to loose the soule of such an offender and in such a case not wee but they haue published their owne names 94 Although we are not to accept persons yet we may make difference of persons because some are more capable of good things than others In which respect our Sauiour Christ tooke some of his Disciples with him to pray and yet but two ●●d those of choise shewing and teaching vs thereby that as wee must auoide popularitie to seeke our owne glorie so we must not hinder God his glorie nor cease to doe pure things before others who for their faithfulnes haue vpright harts and for their wisdome can discerne of things to be well iustructed thereby 95 It is one thing to haue as it were the pricke of a point of a needle and another to haue a wound with the dint of a sword It is one thing to bee stung with the tongue of Serpent and another thing to be hissed a● of a Serpent hauing lost his tongue it is one thing to drinke the cup of gall and poyson to the dregges and another to drinke of a cup the bitte●nes whereof is drawne out Balme placed in the steed of ●t it is one thing to drop a fewe teares and another to sweate drops of bloud it is one thing to be grieued in measure and another thing to be heauie vnto death it is one thing to feele the wrath of God for sinne in our selues but discharged in another another thing to haue the sinne committed of another and sustained in our selues 96 It is a good thing to looke to ones hart in all things especially for vncleannes euen creeping vpon vs in holy things and with most holy persons as when one shall desire in comforting afflicted mindes to doe it rather with women then with men and with beautifull women rather then with others and with rich women rather then with poore women wherein the heart is very corrupt and full of matter to humble vs. 97 The diuell is a skilfull pyrate as for emptie Barkes he neuer makes after them but for those that are po●sed and furnished with best wares those he pursues with maine sailes so those that haue nothing in them the diuell esteemes them no preye but if once wee be fraught with Gods graces then hee malignes vs and hoysteth euery saile to take vs as his spoyle 98 No man hath so good a memorie but hee shall forget a benefit no man hath so ill a memorie but he shall remember an iniurie 99 It is worthie to be marked that Paul saith flie Fornication and Iame● saith resist the diuell for Fornication must not be stood long withall but to put our safetie out of question let vs flee all occasions of it and contrariwise Sathan must not be fled from for that will embolden him but he must be resisted by the word and by prayer and the power of Christ. 100 It is a maruellous thing that a young man should be so zealous in youth and about 40 or 50 yeares should be honest and hold his owne but haue no such vigor as before But we must know that euen his heate is mixed much with heate of youth which shooteth and thrusteth out a little with a great heate and outward shew in the beginning and that afterward the strength of godlines being sounder a man shall be lesse vehement but farre more solid at what time his pure zeale being naked in it selfe for that his yong heate forsakes him seemeth happily to be lesse but sure it is more sound and substantiall than it was before 101 It may seeme strange that we are so much moued with the sermons of godlie men at our first calling and after we haue long beleeued that we should find ourselues so coldly and seldome mou●d Here we must know that at our first entrie to Christianitie there is a more combustible matter in vs that euery little sparke of fire would inflame vs that is that we had such great ignorance that euery principle of knowledge did affresh vs and such prophanenes that euery precept tooke hold on vs but afterward being much purged and clensed both in life and iudgement wee are not so lightly moued we are not so soone caried away euery course di●t will not satisfie vs as at the first Againe the graces of God are sweetest
if before it was begun is now continued or i● it was not before now beginneth and neuer endeth world without ende For though true it is that sicknesse pouertie imprisonment or banishment haue ended their tearme in death yet a wounded heart which was temporall in this life is now eternall after this life that which before death was in hope recouerable is after death made vncurable and vnrecouerable It is good therefore to consider if euen in this life the torment of conscience be so fearefull how much more grieuous is it to sustaine it in hell where that is infinite which here is finite where that is vnmeasurable which here is measurable where is the sea of sorrow whereof this is but a drop where is the flame of that fire whereof this is lesse than a sparke But to shut vp this argument Some there haue beene who throughout all their life time haue beene free from all other troubles so as either they felt them not at all or else in very small measure and by that meanes neuer knew what outward trouble meant As for example some men there haue beene who for sicknesse neuer knew the head-ach for pouertie neuer knew what want meant who for discredit were neuer euill spoken of who euer put farre from them the euill day of the Lord who made a league with death as it were and a couenant with hell who though they could crucifie euery crosse rather than come vnder any crosse yet they could neuer escape a wounded conscience either in this life or in the life to come True it is that Gods children by faith and repentance doe often escape it but the wicked and such as are borne vnto it as to their sure inheritance the more they flie from it the more it pursueth them If we haue transgressed the Ciuill Iawes the Iudge by bribes may be corrupted if a man haue committed some capitall offence by flying his Countrie he may escape the Magistrates hands but our consciences telling vs that we haue sinned against God what bribe shall we offer or whither shall we flie whither shall we goe from his spirit or whither shall we goe from his presence If we ascend into heauen is not he there If we lie downe in hell is he not there If we flie to the vtmost parts of the sea is he not there also There needeth no apparitor to summon vs there needes no Bayly arrant to fetch vs there needes no accuser to giue in against vs sin will arrest vs and lyeth at the doore our owne consciences will impannall a Quest against vs our owne hearts will giue in sufficient euidence and our owne iniquities will pleade guiltie to our owne faces Thus we see both by the experience of them that haue suffered the wound of the spirit and by the comparing of it with other euils what a weight most grieuous and burthen intolerable it is to haue a tormented conscience Now let vs shew how we may preuent and by what meanes Gods children falling into some degrees of it for if it rage in extremitie it is an euill most dangerous may safely and quietly be deliuered from it And here a iust complaint is to be taken vp and it is a wonder to be marked that we see many so carefull and watchfull to auoyd other troubles and so few or none take any paines to escape the trouble of minde which is so grieuous We see men louing health and loathing sicknes in diet temperate in sleepe moderate in Physicke expert skilfull to purge and to auoid such corrupt humors which in time may breede though presently they doe not bring forth some dangerous sicknes yet to auoyd the diseases of the soule no man abateth his sleepe no man abridgeth his diet no man prepareth Physicke for it no man knoweth when to be full and when to be emptie how to want and how to abound Others caried away with the loue of riches and very slie to fall into pouertie will not sticke to rise early and take sleepe lately to fare hardly to teare and taw their flesh in labour by land and by water in faire and foule weather by rockes and by sands from farre and from neere and yet to fall into spirituall decaies to auoide the pouertie of conscience no man taketh such paines as though saluation and peace of minde were not a thing worthie the labouring for Some ambitiously hunting after honour and not easily digesting reproches behaue themselues neither sluggishly nor sleepily but are actiue in euery attempt by loue and by counsell by prudence and prowesse by wit and by practise by labour and learning by cunning and diligence to become famous and to shun a ciuill reproch yet to be glorious in the sight of God and his Angels to fall before the heauens in the presence of the Almightie to be couered with shame and confusion of conscience we make none account as they who neither vse any meanes to obtaine the one nor auoid those occasions which may bring the other Others vnwilling to come within the reach and danger of the law that they may escape imprisonment of body or confiscation of goods will be painefull in penall Satutes skilfull in euery branch of the ciuill law and especially will labour to keepe themselues from treasons murthers felonies and such like offences deseruing the punishment of death yet when the Lord God threatneth the seizure both of soule and body the attaching of our spirits the confiscating of our cōsciences the banishing of vs from heauen the hanging of vs in hell the suspending of our saluation the adiudging of vs to condemnation for the breach of his commandements no man searcheth his eternall law no man careth for the Gospell neither the sentence of euerlasting diuorcement from the Lord neither the couenant of reconciliation is esteemed of vs. And to reach our complaint one degree further Behold the more we seeke outward pleasures and to auoid the inward trouble of minde the more we haste and runne into it and suddenly plunge our selues in a wounded spirit ere we be aware Who posteth more to become rich who hopeth lesse to become poore than the marchant man who aduentureth great treasures who hazardeth his goods who putteth in ieopardie his life and yet suddenly he either rusheth vpon the rocke of hardnesse of heart or else is swallowed vp of the gulph of a despairing minde from which afterwards he cannot be deliuered with a ship full of golde Wofull proofe hath confirmed how some men wholy set on pleasures such as could not away to be sad and to be hedged vp alwaies of godly sorrow haue had their tables made snares and euen their excesse of pleasures hath brought excesse of sorrowes and whilest they laboured to put the euill day farre from them they haue vsed such follies as haue bred them most bitter and terrible torments of their fearefull and trembling consciences There be some of another sorte who
he only considereth of the body and neglecteth the soule For my part I would neuer haue the Physitions counsell seuered nor the Ministers labour neglected because the soule and body dwelling together it is conuenient that as the soule should be cured by the word by prayer by fasting by threatning or by comforting so the body also should be brought into some temperature by Physicke by purging by diet by restoring by musicke and by such like meanes prouiding alwaies that it be done so in the seare of God and wisedome of his spirit as we thinke not by these ordinary meanes to smoother or smoke out our troubles but as purposing to vse them as preparatiues whereby both our soules and bodies may be made more capable of the spirituall meanes to follow after As we require these things to be the matter of our Ministerie in such a perplexitie so we would wish the persons ministring to be men learned and of sound iudgement wise and of godly experience meeke and of most iouing spirits For when the troubled patient shall be wel perswaded of our knowledge and discretion and there withall shall perceiue vs to come in tender and louing affection I thinke an entrance is made and all preiudice is taken away so as we may the more freely worke vpon the conscience first bringing them to the sight of sinne as to some cause of their trouble Herein we must labour to put away all confusion and blindnesse of sorrow endeuouring by wisedome to bring the parties wounded to some certaine obiect and matter of their trouble and so draw out of them the confession of some seuerall especiall secret sinne I say seuerall and secret sinne because I know how many through a palpable blindnesse or disordered discerning of sinne talke of nothing so much as of sinne and yet they either cannot des●ry seuerall sinnes or they will not be brought to acknowledge their secret sinnes whereof the one proceedeth of the ignorance of the law of God and the other of selfe-loue which maketh vs l●●t●●e euen in our trauell of minde to shame our selues Now that the confession of particular sinnes is requisite it may appeare by the two and thirtieth Psalme wherein being a Psalme of instruction concerning the forgiuenesse of sinnes the Prophet by his owne experience teacheth vs that he could finde no reliefe of his sicknesse vntill he had remembred and made confession of his sinnes What shall we thinke that the Prophet of God taught so wonderfully by the word and by the spirit did not see his sinnes before Be it farre from vs. Rather let vs know that he had not seuerally particularly ripped vp his sinnes before the Lord in a seuerall confession of them Which though the Lord knoweth farre better than we our selues yet such kinde of sacrifice is most acceptable vnto him Now if in this trouble the persons humbled cannot come to the particular sight of sinne in themselues it is good to vse the helpe of others vnto whom they may offer their harts to be gaged and searched and their liues to be examined more deepely by hearing the seuerall Articles of the Law laid open before them whereby they may trie the whole course of their actions For as we said before the grossest hypocrites will generally complaine of sinne and yet deale with them in particular pointes of the particular precepts and prooue them in the applying of things to be done or not done to their owne consciences and we shall see many of these poore soules tossed to and fro now floting in ioyes now plunged in sorrowes not able to distinguish one sinne from another Now when we shall see the wound of the spirit to arise of any certaine and knowne sin it is either for some sin alreadie cōmit●ed wherein we lie or else for some sin as yet not committed but whereunto we are tempted For the former it pleaseth God oftētimes to bring old sins to minde when we had not throughly repented of them before that so as it were representing them to vs afresh we might fall into a more misliking of them And yet herein is not all to mislike our selues for some particulars although it be good to be occupied about some speciall sinnes for as it is not sufficient for the auoyding of hypocrisie to see sinne generally so it is not enough to eschue the deceiueablenes of the heart euer to be poring busily in one particular and to be forgetfull of our great and generall sinnes But let vs learne by the particulars to passe to the generals When any such one sin then doth pursue thee rest not onely therein but say thus rather to thy selfe Oh Lord is this one sin so grieuous and doth my God punish this one sinne so sorely How great then should be my punishment if thou shouldest O Lord so deale with me for all my other sinnes Let vs labour to haue a sense both of generall and of particular sinnes least in time our griefe passe away without fruite whilest that not being displeased as well with one sinne as with another we either looke too superficially to generals and not to particulars or else too superstitiously obserue particulars and not the generals Concerning those sinnes whereunto we are tempted as when a man is moued to thinke blasphemously of God the father or to doubt whether there be a Christ or no or to imagine grossely of the holy Ghost or to deny God or to doubt of the Trinitie or to be moued to murther adulterie or such like in which temptations he feeleth Gods spirit to checke him for thē so as he knoweth not in this case what to doe for that on the one side he dares not listen willingly to these fearefull and monstrous temptations and on the other side he feareth least in time by long suite he might fall into them or at the least for that he se●th not how to be deliuered from them I suppose these motions are not so much to be disputed with a● we by them are to be prouoked to more instant and extraordinarie zeale of prayer Surely these are dangerous temptations and therefore are not to be kept close which our nature will easily incline vnto but particularly are to be confessed of vs. For the diuell will come sometime to thee to keepe thee still in a generall acknowledging of sinne and vrge thee on this manner Surely thou must needes doe this sinne thou seest thou canst haue no ●ase vntill thou hast consented thou art ordained to it the reason why thou art thus incessantly tempted is because thou doest not thus take thy pleasure Goe to denie God beleeue not his word it is but a policie to keepe men in aw● Religion is no such matter as men take it Thus for feare of yeelding on the one hand and for shame of disclosing the temptations on the other hand many men haue pined away and almost haue beene ouercome by them If we should disclose this say
these men what would people say of vs They would count vs Atheists they would thinke vs the wickedest men in the world Well for our instruction and consolation herein let vs learne that these kindes of temptations are either corrections for some sinnes past or punishments for some sinne present or forewarners of some sinne to come We shall see many tempted to adulterie who no doubt cannot be brought to commit it and yet because in their youth they haue committed it and not repented of it it comes to them againe The like may be obserued in theft in gluttonie and in other temptations which are not so much sent vnto vs presently to ouercome vs as to put vs in minde that sometime heretofore we hauing bin ouercome with them should now repent for them Sometime a man shall lie in some sinne whereof when he will not be admonished neither by the publike nor priuate meanes then some other strange temptation shall fall vpon him differing from that wherein he presently lieth to admonish him of that other sinne As when a worldling shall be tempted to adulterie a thing which he hath no desire to doe yet it is to make him looke to his worldlines whereof he hath so strong and thorough a liking wherewith if then he will not be awaked he may suddenly fall into that too and so by the punishment of God in punishing one sinne with another both his sinnes shal be to his great shame layd open and one sinne shall make knowne another Sometime also it commeth to passe that one shall be tempted with such a sinne as neither heretofore nor presently he hath giuen any liking or entertainment vnto and yet the Lord by it may forewarne him how he may fall into it hereafter as also to shew that he hath stood all his former life rather by the grace of God than by the strength of flesh and blood Wherefore when thou art moued to doubt of God of Christ of the word or of iustification doe not so much stand wondring at these strange temptations as thinke with thy selfe that it is the mercie of God by them to cause thee better to discerne of those temptations in others when thou shalt haue obserued with feare and trembling how they make their first entrie into a mans heart how they gather strength how they agree with our corrupt nature in what degrees they come to some groweth how the spirit of God doth resist thē what be the meanes best to preuaile against them And thus if thou make thy profit by them thou shalt so wonderfully search and descrie by seuerall veines the bodie age and ●leight of these temptations in others by an holy experience which God hath taught thee in thy selfe that besides that thou shalt lay forth mens secret corruptions as if thou werst in their bosomes thou shalt be able also by the seede of sorrow in thy selfe to beget an vnspeakable ioy in others who in time may be tempted as thou now art Thinke moreouer and besides that such is the efficacie of sinne that they who are now no Papists Heretikes Adulterers or Theeues may for their secure contemning foolish passing ouer of these temptations sent vnto them suddenly shortly after fall into them because they would not seeke to make some vse of them nor confesse before the Lord both their pronenesse and worthinesse to fall into them But if we will humble our selues in such temptations learne by them meekely to discerne the corruptions of our harts we shall not onely presently deliuer our selues from perill but be also further enabled to assist others hereafter in the like danger But some will oppose against these things which we haue deliuered Doe you thinke it a remedie to cast downe them that are alreadie humbled This is rather to be a butcher than a builder of a mans conscience To whom I answere that I desire preachers to be builders and not butchers and it is one thing generally to applie and another particularly to lay the medicine vnto the wound It is good to begin with searching first and to purge the sore by the vineger of the Law after to supple it with the oyle of the Gospell Both which must be done in wisedome vsing them to some in greater to some in lesser measure For as some hauing nothing but a decay of nature no mortall humour neede rather restoratiue than purging medicines so some rather troubled for some spirituall wants than for grosser sinnes neede not so much the sharpe threatnings of the Law as the sweete promises of the Gospell As the body through some extraordinarie repletion hauing gotten some great surfet not so much to the weakening of nature as to the threatning of imminent death and therefore requireth rather some strong purgation than comfortable and cordiall medicines euen so the soule brought almost to deaths doore with some extraordinary sinne is rather to be bored and pearced with the denouncing of Gods iudgements than otherwise But because we would deale more plainly and lesse confusedly it is good in our accesse to afflicted consciences to lay these two grounds First we must perswade the persons humbled that their sins are pardonable their sores curable And after that this visitation is not so much a signe of Gods wrath and anger as a seale of his mercie and fauour in that it is not either blind or barren but plentifull in good effects and fruitfull in godly issues The former how needfull it is the experience of so many almost as haue been throwne downe is a sufficient witnes who haue had this as a tagge tied to their temptations that neuer any were so plagued as they none euer had the like temptations the Lord will surely make an end of them in some strange and vnknowne temptation Wherein they are not vnlike vnto men fallen into some dangerous disease who thinking them selues to be without the fadome of the Physitions skill not to be within the compasse of things recouerable adde a second and sorer griefe vnto their former Wherefore as these men seeme to be halfe healed when any man of knowledge can be brought who by experience hath cured the like maladie in like degrees in others so these sorrowfull soules are not a little by hope refreshed strengthened to looke for some ease when they see none other temptation to haue ouertaken them than such as hauing fallen into the nature of man haue found mercy at the hands of God that he might be feared This ground worke framed it is good to build vp repaire the decayed ioy of the mind partly by the law to make a preparatiue for these ioyes if the mind not truly humbled be not fit to be truly comforted partly by the Gospell if the conscience kindly throwne downe is become a fit subiect to apply the sweete promises of God in Iesus Christ vnto it And here againe to answere them that denie the law wholy or at
Lord but mediately from God to his people by the ministerie of Moses For it is said Deutero 5. 22. These words the Lord spake vnto all your multitude in the mount out of the middest of the fire the clouds and the darknesse with a great voyce and added no more thereto In which place the man of God speaketh of the tenne commaundements which a little before he had repeated as they were published generally to all by the Lord himselfe which therefore are prepetuall to all people nations and languages not onely to the Iewes but also to the Gentiles The ceremonies as we know were not vniuersall but beginning with the Iewes they ended with them neither were they perpetuall but in Christ his comming were abrogated This difference is yet more plainely set downe Deutero 4. 13. 14. Then the Lord declared vnto you his couenant which he commaunded you to doe euen the tenne Commaundements and wrote them vpon two tables of stone And the Lord commaunded me the same time that I should teach you ordinances and lawes which yee should obserue in the land whither ye goe to possesse it Where Moses maketh a flat difference of those lawes which God gaue in his owne person and them which were giuen by his ministerie By this word ordinances which is in this verse are signified as some affirme those lawes whereby the Iewes did differ from other people Thus we see how Moses was the minister of the ceremoniall law which was giuen but vnto some and lasted but for a season but the morall law which appertaineth to all men and is in vertue for euer the Lord himselfe did giue it forth Now as we answere the Papists in defending against them the second precept as morall and not ceremoniall so we likewise stand against them in this For looke what straying and vnstaied mindes were in the Iewes concerning the worship of God the same also is in vs by nature and what helpes soeuer they needed therein either to be put in minde of their creation or to the viewing of God his workes or sacrificing to the Lord the same are as needfull for vs to helpe vs in our sacrifices for we neede a perfect rule as well as the Iewes to preserue vs from idolatrie and heresie Againe seeing we haue as great neede of a solemne time for these things wherein we may giue our selues wholly to hearing praying and receiuing of the Sacraments as they had for their worship we are subiect to as great distractions of minde in our callings as they were and being with them of a finite nature can no more than they doe infinite things It is as requisite for vs as for them to haue a lawe as well for the time as for the manner of worship wherein laying aside our ordinarie workes we should chiefely and principally wholly giue our selues to those exercises of Religion and duties of loue which onely in part we did before and so more freely espie our sinnes past eschue our sinnes present and strengthen our selues against the sinnes to come Wherefore to shut vp this argument we affirme against the wicked heretikes of our time that so long as we stand in neede of corporall meanes as meate drinke apparell and sleepe for the continuing of our corporall estate so long we shall also neede the spirituall meanes as the word the Sacraments and prayer for the continuing of our soules And as it is not ceremoniall for these considerations to vse these meanes so it is morall to haue a time commaunded and obserued wherein these things should be practised It remaineth to speake of the fourth last reason drawne from the proportion of God his owne example as may appeare in these words Exod. 20. 11. For in sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and earth the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it Wherein we haue thus much in effect as the Lord made the creatures in sixe daies so wee in sixe should haue a naturall vse of them And as he sanctified that is put a part the seuenth day to his owne worship and blessed it with a peculiar blessing giuen to his worship appointed so we also setting this day apart from the ordinarie workes of our calling should wholly and onely consecrate it to the worship of God So that as God made all things in sixe daies so wee may vse them sixe daies as Adam did in the garden and as the Lord rested from his workes of creation though not from his worke of prouidence and administration so must we set a part this day to looke for a speciall blessing and speciall benediction of God his worship because of his owne promise and institution Why did the Lord this to our first father he beheld the workes of euery day and blessed euery day We must note that he gaue a speciall blessing aboue the other daies vnto this day Now therefore admit that a man should graunt this much to an heretike that we should be as perfect as Adam in his innocencie which is a manifest heresie yet they must graunt that we stood in need of the word and Sacraments the vse whereof they deny seeing Adam had neede of the vse of all these things being yet without sinne We therefore oppose thus much vnto them that so long as they will acknowledge a neede of corporall helpes by calling for meate sleepe apparell so long their soules stand in need of spirituall meanes as of the word Sacraments and prayer because their soules must as well be preserued as their bodies nourished Our first father then had a Sabbath to be put in minde of the Creator and that without distraction he might the better be put in minde of the glorious kingdome to come that more freely he might giue himselfe to meditation and that he might the better glorifie God in sixe daies As the heretikes then denie the necessitie of the word prayer and Sacraments so we looke for a new heauen and a new earth and then we hope and acknowledge that we shall keepe a continuall Sabbath But in the meane time seeing the Sabbath which we now haue was before sinne we since sinne came into the world haue much more neede of it because that which was needfull to continue Adam in innocencie is also as needfull to recouer vs and to continue vs in our recouerie The Lord then hauing sanctified this day it is not our day but the Lord his owne day But some will say How is God better serued on the Sabbath than on any other day I answer not that we put religon in that day as it is a day more than in any other but that on that day we are freer from distractions and set at more libertie to the worshipping of God than we are on the other sixe daies wherein we are bound to our ordinarie and lawfull calling Wherefore as we put on holinesse in the
creatures of water bread and wine in the Sacraments but acknowledge all inward grace to proceede from God his blessing and institution so we promise vnto our selues on the Lord his day a greater blessing not for any thing in the day it selfe but by reason of God his owne ordinance and promise of a blessing to the same And as we denie not a blessing from the Lord on priuate prayer reading and conference but acknowledge a greater blessing to be due euen by the Lord his owne promise to these exercises publike in cōparison of the other so wee denie not the grace of God to be vpon those houres redeemed from our outward callings and consecrated to the Lord but confesse a more speciall blessing from God to belong to that whole day which the Lord hath taken vp to himselfe alone and that for his owne promise sake vnto all them which come with simple hearts to obey his holy commaundement Now hauing gone through these reasons which proue the Sabbath day to be morall and that this commaundement is no lesse to be obserued than the other nine before we enter into the exposition of the law it selfe it shal be cōuenient to meet with such reasons as some men bring to preludice the trueth of that which hath beene alreadie spoken which being done by God his grace we will come to the other The reasons against the Sabbath may briefely be reduced into such as either seeme to be drawne out of the expresse words of the Scriptures or else by some consequence to be gathered from the Scriptures The arguments borrowed from the written word are either out of the olde Testament or out of the new they which are contained in the olde are taken either out of the lawe or out of the Prophets Out of the lawe they make much a doe about that which is written Exod. 31. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. where the Lord faith this vnto Moses Speake thou vnto the children of Israel and say Notwithstanding keepe ye my Sabbaths for it is a signe betweene me and you in your generations that ye may know that I the Lord doe sanctifie you Ye shall therefore keepe the Sabbath for it is holy vnto you he that defileth it shall die the death therefore whosoeuer worketh therein the same person shall be euen cut off from among his people Sixe daies shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest to the Lord whosoeuer doth any worke on the Sabbath day shall die the death Wherefore the children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath that they may obserue the rest throughout their generations for an euerlasting couenant It is a signe betweene me and the children of Israel for euer for in sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and in the seuenth day hee ceased and rested Out of these words they snatch these three reasons First they triumph before the conquest and say it is manifest that it is a signe and therefore as they please to conclude it is a figure True it is that it is here called a signe vers 13. as also Ezech. 20. 12 it is plaine howbeit this is no good reason that seeing the Sabbath is a signe therefore it is a figure or shadowe For although euery figure and shadowe be a signe yet euery signe is not a figure or shadow A figure foresheweth a trueth afterwards to be reuealed a shadow betokeneth a bodie hereafter to be exhibited but a signe as it doth sometimes signifie a thing afterwards to be looked for so it doth sometimes assure vs of a thing alreadie performed The figure ceaseth when the trueth commeth there is no vse of the shadow when the body is present but the signe and the thing signified may be ioyned together and both of them serue for a present vse Againe they gather out of the 16. verse of the chapter which we haue in hand where it is said The children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath that they may obserue the rest through their generations for an euerlasting couenant that because the Sabbath of God is his couenant for euer that is vntill Christ it is ceremoniall True it is that the lawe admitteth this phrase of speech sundrie times to say for euer that is vntill Christ in whom al things are fulfilled But we must obserue this general rule as our guide when we will know what figures and ceremonies end in Christ and what morall precepts belong vnto vs. When a thing is vrged to the Iewes and hath a peculiar reason made properly to the Iewe and appertaineth nothing to the Christian then as it begunne with the Iewes as they were Iewes it ceased with the Iewes but when the reason of the thing vrged is not peculiar to the Iewes but also belongeth to the Christians then the thing commanded is not proper to the Iew but common to the Iew and Gentile Wherefore let vs square out the reason by the line of this generall rule It is here added v. 17. For in six daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and in the seuenth day he ceased and rested Where if it had beene said they shall obserue the rest for an euerlasting couenant because they were brought out of Egypt I would haue graunted it to haue beene peculiar to the Iewes but seeing this is the reason the Lord rested which is common not to the posteritie of Abraham alone but to the whole posteritie of Adam the commaundement must be granted generall both to Iew and Gentile For it is a common instruction to all men in all ages to labour six daies wherein the Lord made the heauen and the earth and to cease from labour the seuenth day because in it the Lord rested The plaine sense then of this place is briefly this as if the Lord should say I made this law in the beginning of the world and it shall last to the end of the world I made it to Adam the father of all generations and it shall endure to the last of all his posteritie from generation to generation I made this law to ease my selfe after my great paines taken in the creating of the world in sixe daies and you shall keepe it to ease your mindes which are fraught with many distractions by reason of your ordinarie callings in those daies Neither would I haue any to thinke that the Lord had neede of any refreshing who being infinite cannot be subiect to distractions or wearines but we must know that where the Lord is said that he refreshed himselfe by taking view of his creatures he commendeth his loue to vs ward in shewing rather what ought to be in vs than what was in him For such alacritie and diligence should we vse in our callings as we should be glad when the Lords day commeth that in it we shall recouer our selues and ease our mindes of those distractions which burthen vs in our outward calling and so
doe affirme that on that day it perisheth if it be vngathered on which day it commeth foorth then I do think that by the law of necessitie this thing happening it may be gathered on the Sabbath yet with these conditions that as many gather as can conueniently be gotten that no publike exercise of the worship of God be omitted that their mindes be holy and spiritually occupied that gather it Now if some will obiect that there is somewhat in the order of nature which fighteth with the ordinance of this law I answere for as much as this thing commeth on the Lords day but seldome times that therefore it is not a thing ordinarie but as a work of necessitie Now to fold vp this question we required in gathering that we should be spiritually minded which they may shewe in giuing it a marke of separation that is that they bestow it on the poorer if the be of they more wealthie sort if they be of meaner condition yet they may impart something to their more needie brethren as testifying thereby that they seeke not their gaine but the glorie of God It remaineth briefly and in a word to speake of trauailing which if it bee ordinarie and vsuall is in no case lawfull but if it be extraordinarie and necessarie as often it happeneth to Lawyers or Physitions the according to the necessitie it is more or lesse permitted We see that many Papists wil not stirre out on their Saints daies whereby is detected the want of our spirituall loue which make no conscience to cease on the Lords day And so the religion deuised by man findeth better entertainment a further practise than that which was ordained by God If any man obiect the losse of his liuing if he should not labour on this day I oppose against that the losse of God his glorie and that with his interrogatory whether the miserable pelfe of man should not giue roome to the immortal glorie of God And experience confirmeth the trueth of Gods word that in vaine men rise early and so late take their rest in vaine they build and take so great paines when the Lord denieth the blessing And what were it to bee rich by policie and poore by God his displeasure What though the bagge be heauie and their consciences troubled What if they be rich with men and poore with God Againe who is it that so disposed of his iournies and his affaires so as some making conscience of their Sabbath are in their iournies in one day better prospered in their affaires in one houre more furthered than many others contemning the ordinance of God are in many houres and in many dayes Who directeth men to bee prouident in their sales and bargainings Who besotteth and infatuateth others Who sendeth a man that not for a simple desire of gaine but for a single care to walke in his calling vseth the trade of buying and selling moe chapmen in one houre than another man hath in an whole day whose heart is inflamed whose eyes are inkindled with louing gaine and looking for profit howsoeuer it come by hooke or by crooke Men ascribe this to chance and so they oft by the iust iudgement of God receiue a blanke that is trusting to the blind world they receiue not so much gaine as will acquite their charges Can men trauaile day and night by sea and by land and that for a thing transitorie and will they reach out no houres for the defence of God his worship Doe they feare theeues if they inlarge their iourney for the keeping of a good conscience are they not afraid of theeues when for their worldly affections they can trauaile early and late Because herein the terror of their owne consciences will preach more forcibly to them than I can speake I will leaue them to that practise of the man of God which is vsed Nehem. 12 And thus hauing spoken of the workes of our callings now wee are to speake of the workes of our pleasures Concerning the lawfull recreations of this life which Christianity doth permit and not forbid for of vnlawfull pleasures being alwaies out of season and especially on the Sabbath we haue nothing to say whether they may haue place and time on the Lords day or no here is the question In this part of the treatise I say wee doe not speake of prophane idle pleasures but of them which bring some further vse after they be vsed which are permitted by the word of God so measure in them may be vsed and they be sanctified vnto vs by the word and by prayer And yet euen for these we dare not giue the time consecrated to God vnto playing and pleasures Neither are we curiously to frame any exquisite diuision in this matter but first we will consider of the feasts and bankets accustomed on this day and afterward of other recreations and exercises at that time frequented and vsed which though in their time place and persons they are not vnlawfull yet at this time on the Lords day we denie them to be lawfull As for feasts we may part them into Loue feasts Church feasts sumptuous feasts which carie with them some further expences and larger liberalitie as are those which are vsed at mariages at the admitting of men into their ciuill offices or else are taken vp for some speciall benefits receiued or some extraordinarie iudgements remoued or some other causes like vnto these as when men carying some port and countenance in the common wealth according to their degrees and callings at some times doe ordaine Touching these solemne and sumptuous feasts thus much we affirme briefly Such as on the Lords day institute such solemnities and stuffe euery office and bumbast euery corner of the house with men and women are to be admonished duly to consider of that which is reported of Dauid both in the historie of the Kings and in the booke of the Chronicles who hauing a vaine desire and superfluous appetite would not deferre but longed to taste of the water of the well of Bethlehem a well fenced citie and from whence water could not be conueied by hand without some ieopardie to them that fetcht it Wherfore three of his most worthie men haue this busines assigned them to the compassing whereof their liues were hazarded At their returne grace making his after fruites better than the former after better deliberation vsed he powred forth the water on the ground saying God forbid that I should drink the blood or the liues of these three men shewing thereby both his offence in sending them the free mercie of God in sauing them Wherefore for as much as these pompous preparations cannot cōueniently be vsed on the Sabbath without the hazard of mens soules though the Lord in mercie may saue their soules as in that diuers offices in great families require diuers persons to performe diuers duties and so that which is a day of rest is made a
the spirits of men 1. Ioh. 4. to make soūder confession of our faith to stop the mouthes of our aduersaries and to answere the temptations of Sathan and the wicked But because men sinne not onely in neglect of hearing and reading but also in hearing and reading amisse therefore the properties of reuerent faithfull reading and hearing are to be set downe which are these that follow they be eight in number 1. Diligence 2. Wisedome 3. Preparation 4. Meditation 5. Conference 6. Faith 7. Practise 8. Prayer The three first goe before reading and preaching The foure next come after them The last must goe before and be with them and come after them 1 If diligence be necessarie in reading prophane authors then much more in reading the Scriptures Diligence maketh a rough way plaine and easie and of good taste which otherwise is hard and vnfauourie In our diligence we must keepe an euen course and not to be like those who vpon some sudden good motion or by reason of some good companie or by reason of some good action draw neere or for feare of danger c. reade for a time and soone after giue ouer againe Reade Prou. 2. 12. Matth. 13. 54. 2 With diligence must be ioyned wisedome which is in choise of Matter Order Time For want of wisedome in the matter they reade many sinne in studying other bookes before the Scriptures and in the Scriptures in searching things not reuealed and pretermitting things reuealed as Iohn and Iames sought who should sit at Christs right hand and left hand but they sought not to come thither And the Disciples said Act. 1. Wilt thou at this time restore the kingdome to Israel not asking the meanes to come to the kingdome of heauen And in things reuealed many will curiously and busily search for things not profitable as genealogies and caresly neglect the things that are to be searched And some ignorant how to reforme themselues will be talking of reforming the Church And if the Preacher must giue milke to the weake and stronger meate to the stronger Christians if he must thus applie his doctrine to the hearers then much more the hearers themselues must applie their owne reading to their owne capacities Wisedome is in order as that men must be first grounded in the principall points of doctrine first we must lay the foundation and build vpon the same also we must keep an order in our readings and not be now in this place now in another for order is the best helpe for memorie and vnderstanding he that readeth little after a good manner profiteth more than he that readeth much otherwise as he that ●impeth in the way doth better than he that runneth in another way or out of the way Therefore for want of order many reade much but profit little Wisedome must be vsed in discerning the times for we must not reade alwaies and doe nothing else as some offending in the one extreame are after driuen by Sathan to the other The Sabbath is wholy to be spent in such exercises on other daies in the morning at noone and in the euening that is when we may redeeme the day from the workes of our calling as Dauid and Daniel did pray at these three times vnder which is contained all the worship of God Wee must doe as much as we can euery day and no day must passe without a line God hath made euery thing beautifull in his time Ecclesiast 3. vers 11. 3 Preparation followeth If any man goe away without any profit and either vnderstandeth not or vnderstandeth amisse want of preparation is the cause Preparation is 1 In feare of God his Maiestie 2 In faith in Iesus Christ. 3 In a good and honest heart with a greedie desire to eate vp Gods word In all apparitions God alwaies sent feare before as his apparitor it ingendreth teachablenesse and meekenesse of minde as we see in Isaac who as it is said feared and then he said I haue blessed Iacob and he shall be blessed We see it also in the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4. 7. and in the men Act. 2. From want of this reuerent feare commeth all checking of God his word and that men dare be so bold with it but they that feare will be swift to heare and slow to speake Iames. 1. 19. and will lay vp his word in their heart with the Virgin Mary Though they vnderstand it not though they kicke at the word and spurne against it yet if God once teach them with his feare then will they acknowledge it to be the blessed word of God Feare commeth vpon men sometime they know not how and if then they go to God they shall finde some excellent blessing either in hauing their vnderstanding inlightened or some good affections put into them This feare is in respect of God his Maiestie and our owne corruption to correct the pride of reason and to controll our affections and experience will shew that when our reason and affections are tamed by miserie calamitie sicknes and inward griefe then we are very teachable And when men erre then the pride of their reason is punished as in heretikes and prophane persons Contrarily God his good spirit resteth vpon the humble to cleere their vnderstandings but they first crucifie their vnderstanding and affections and offer them vp in a sacrifice to God Faith in Christ is the second thing in this preparation we must bring that with vs when we come to read looking on him as on the Messiah that must teach vs all things he is the Lion of the tribe of Iuda to whom it is giuen to open the booke of God He opened the hearts of the Disciples going to Emaus Preachers build hay and stubble because they doe not onely glory in him but doe seeke credit and preferment by preaching themselues All heretikes differ among themselues yet they all agree in this that they e●●e from Iesus Christ. A heart prepared to learne is required Pro. 17. 16. Wherefore is there a price in the heart of a foole to get wisedome and he hath no heart Our Lord Iesus Christ saith that those that brought forth fruit when they had heard some thirtie some sixtie some an hundred fold they were such as receiued the word with a good and honest heart Luc. 8. Here saith a godly and learned man men are shut out because they come without a heart Now follow the properties that must follow our readings Whereof the first is meditation the want of which makes men depart without fruit though they reade or heate diligently Meditation makes that which we haue read to be our owne He is blessed which meaitates in the law day and night Psal. 1. 2. Meditation is either of the Minde and vnderstanding Heart and affections Meditation of the vnderstanding is when reason discourseth of things read or heard which the wise of the Heathen call the refining of iudgement the life
me wisedome in the secret of mine heart And Psal. 139. 23 Trie me O Lord and know mine heart proue me and knowe my thoughts In the night Of his holie exercises in the night the man of God speaketh Psal. 119 55. I haue remembred thy name in the night O Lord and haue kept thy law And Psal. 62. At midnight will I rise to giue thankes vnto thee because of thy righteous iudgements And vers 148. Mine eyes preuent the night watches to meditate in thy law The Physitians affirme that our dreames in the night season are agreeable to our musings in the day time and that our affections in our sleepe doe much follow the complexions the repletiō or euacuation of the bodie according to these they say also are the dispositions of the minde naturally without some violent alteration or extraordinarie operatiō And surely a man by diligent obseruation may espie his inclination of minde as well by his dreames sleeping as by his cogitations waking or rather the better by how much the night is more free from those troubles which worke great perturbations violent distractions of the minde in the day So that the agitations of the minde are by so much the more strong and effectual by how much it is more free and naturall which experience may teach both in them that are renewed and such as are vnregenerate The Philosophers not much disagreeing say that the ciuill vertuous man is much affected in the night according to his actions in the day and that the vertuous and the vicious man concerning halfe their liues that is the night seasō or sleeping times doe nothing differ sane that the dreames of the vertuous are good the dreames of the vitious are euill which if it be so then much more shall they whose hearts are throughly sanctified with the spirit of God either find comfort in good things or sorrow for their sinnes euen in the night season Such is the mercie of our God that he ceaseth not to continue our knowledge and to teach vs by his spirit and meditation euen in the night season and if at any time they breake forth into more sensuall libertie proceeding from their naturall appetite they make this profite of it by iudging that the Lord correcteth these wandring thoughts in the day by confused dreames in the night and their impure cogitations waking by vnchast imaginations in sleeping By the reines I gather is signified not the spirituall parts of the minde but the more grosse sensible parts of the bodie separated farre from the heart and that part which conceaueth and seemeth to be the Prophet his sense Psal. 51. 6. vers which before we alleadged that the Lord will not to that part which is most sensuall haue libertie giuen and that he hath charged the reformation of the soule to stretch it selfe to the most naturall parts and which are common with vs to brute beasts that euen in them also we should be sanctified Thus we see there is no part of vs whereof the Lord in mercie hath not care euen in the night in which one blessing the Lord will discerne and distinguish vs from brute beasts and more confirme vs in godlines For it is no small benefit if we rightly consider it that the spirit of God should so moderate with a continuall regiment our affections that if our imaginations burst forth wee should receiue the checke and be controuled in the night and by comparing one thing with another long agoe forgotten that the Lord should bring things againe to our remembrance Thus when we know we lye on the Lord his bed that in darke we must behold him present and feele our affections rectified our reines sanctified and our bed vndefiled we may be assured of some further sinceritie of our hearts wrought by his holy spirit and doubtlesse as we sayd before there is no small tryall of our hearts euen in our dreames when all things being more quiet then in the day greater oportunitie is offered of entering into our selues and furnishing our selues with serious deuises whether it bee in good or euill Wherfore God his children are not so lightly to passe ouer their night-thoughts but that they obserue in them either the mercifull corrections of God of some sinnes past or his gratious admonition of some sinnes to come or else his fauourable instructions concerning some sinne present which not beeing repented of will as well breake forth openly in the day as secretly in the night Nights To conclude we see in Dauid a minde throughly sanctified where the spirit of God keeping a continuall residence wrought a continuall progresse and growing in spirituall knowledge as well by nights as by dayes It followeth in the next verse I haue set the Lord alwayes before mee for hee is at my right hand therefore I shall not slide Hauing shewed before his delight in the Saints his hatred of Idolaters his stayed and full contented minde in God as his portion and inheritance who as well continued in him as he did begin his grace and that not only more openly in the day but also more secretly in the nights the Prophet now declareth how by all this hee was mooued to thinke that God was at all times in all places present with him both as a Lord to suruay his wayes least he should slip grossely and as a father to comfort him when he slipt of infirmitie His meaning and intent then is thus much that hauing seuered himselfe from Idolaters and ioyned in league with the Saincts wholy resting himselfe on the Lord and his word he desired nothing more then as the Lord had set a continuall watch ouer him both by day and by night so he might haue his heart in continuall awe to bee prepared for the Lord his presence The selfe same obedience the Lord requireth of Abraham Genes 17. 1. saying I am God all sufficient walke before me and be vpright that is seeing I am able by mine Almightie power to bring to passe whatsoeuer by couenant in mercie I haue promised to thee make me the arbiter of thy thoughts the suruayer of thy words and the viewer of thy workes commit thy wayes vnto mee in all things Neither must we thinke this to be enioyned to Abraham alone that others be exempted from this obedience but that euery true Israelite euery good Christian and true beleeuer who looketh with Abraham for God his power in accomplishing his promises must be assured hereof like as he was For where wee looke for like mercie we must performe like dutie and where wee hope for the like grace wee must haue the like faith albeit not in so great proportion yet in some acceptable measure following him whose example Rom. 4. we must not thinke so much to be person all as reall and for imitation How we should thus walke before the Lord we are taught of the holy Ghost Micah 6. 6. Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my selfe
our wicked deedes our vnfauorie words but also the fountaine of al these euen our corrupt nature our vnbridled and vntamed affections our heart which is wonderfull faultie may be made knowne vnto vs that we may come to make conscience of our very thoughts because the thoughts are grieuous breaches of the law of God who being a Spirit hath made a law for our heart for our thoughts for our soule and conscience and thus being very loth in the sight of God to offend by thoughts vaine and vngodly to striue with our flesh and to haue our affections subdued to the spirit that so our heart being reformed all our members may bee conformable in euery respect to the will and commandement of Almightie God And thus farre must we be humbled if we will be truly humbled before the Lord. And truly if wee be not rightly humbled before the Lord we can hardly haue any assurance that wee are the children of God For without this humbling of vs hauing had some taste of the promises of God wee for the most part resemble the corne that our Sauiour speaketh of sowen in the stonie groūd which for a time flourished that is made a faire face as many hypocrites can doe now But hauing no roote nor nothing at all in truth they shew themselues how vnable they are to stand because they haue no deepnes of ground the seede of the word neuer begun nor rooted in their hearts So that we must be truly hūbled before the Lord and the word must be permitted to rip and lay open vnto vs the very secrets and thoughts of the heart Now those which see and feele their sinnes and are alreadie humbled more especially are humbled either by preaching of the law vnto them or else by affliction Affliction is either of the body or of the minde of these the Lord sometime to humble vs doth send the one sometime the other sometime both and all to humble vs before his Maiesty when as he seeth by reason of the corruption of our nature that the preaching of the law is not sufficient to humble vs to strike that terror into our hearts which might make vs duely prepared to receiue into our hearts the sweete and comfortable promises made to vs in Christ that it might be so rooted that it might still grow vp euen to the full ripe and perfitage of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ because I say our louing father seeth that the law will not suffice vs therefore it pleaseth him in mercie who will leaue no way vnassayed for the saluation of his children to prepare vs by afflicting vs which can not by the hearing of his law be truly prepared Now if affliction bee such a notable thing and the Lord worketh euen eternall life thereby oftentimes to those whom hee hath elected and called to bee his how louingly ought they to embrace it to whom the Lord so fatherly doth offer it and how patiently and chearefully ought they to beare it in asmuch as they thereby may assure themselues that God hath seuered them from the world and from those on whom he meaneth to shew no mercie in the day of his wrath And as for those whom the Lord as yet hath laid no scourge vpon them let them not long for it but let them lay the law of God and the threatnings thereof vnto their hearts to humble them thereby It is better to be humbled thereby than by affliction and yet better by affliction than not at all To commend affliction and to mislike of preaching of the law is as though one should commend a sore and dangerous purgation and mislike a good diet A good diet is able and it is the ordinarie meanes appointed of God to procure and conserue health which as many of vs as are not vnwise will obserue Now if for want of discretion or for greedie desire we neglect this and so by gathering together of ill and noysome humors within vs we endanger our life yet to saue our life wee will suffer the working of the most strong purgation that the Physition shall prescribe vs so the law that is the ordinarie meanes to make vs apt to heare the word of peace and saluation and ought of vs to be obserued and applied vnto vs that we may thereby be preserued rather than by affliction yet if our mercifull Lord and only Physition of our soule shall with tender compassion looke vpon our sores and shall see the maladie of our soule to bee incurable without the strong purgation of affliction then ought we euen with good courage to take it except we will suffer and see our endlesse vexation So purgation is good but it is more wisedome to obserue diet and affliction is profitable but if the law might take place effectually that were needelesse Let vs take heed therefore we deceiue not ourselues in thinking that affliction is the only meanes to bring vs to God and so neglect the due preparing by the law till time of affliction We see that is the meanes rather than this and affliction indeede is the curse of God Now the curse of God is the verifying of his lawe and though it please God to blesse it as he doth alwayes to his children for all things turne to the best to them that loue him yet ought it not to be the meanes to humble vs rather than the other The end of affliction and of threatning both is to humble vs and therefore it were better to be humbled by threatning than by experience of punishment for the threats of the law may doe this as well as affliction if we be not vnwise In our selues we may haue some testimonie of our true humbling in time of affliction yet is it hard to say for others whether one which now feeleth the hand of God vpon him and neuer felt any token of Gods displeasure before be either truly humbled for his sinnes for which he is afflicted or seemeth to be humbled because of the paine that he abideth Therefore euen he that is afflicted ought to examine his own soule whether he be truly humbled and feele within himselfe euen a griefe that hee hath so diuersly prouoked God to plague him acknowledging Gods vnspeakeable mercie and long suffering that he long ere this did not cleane consumne him least otherwise the diuel deceiue him as he hath done diuers who for a time seemed to bee humbled because of the heate of their griefe but afterwards when the Lord hath staied his hand they shew what their humbling was they turne againe to sinne as a dogge to his vomit and as a sow that is washing to her wallowing in the mire But as for him that feeleth the weight and burthen of his sinnes and Gods displeasure for sinne and euen groneth as it were vnder the burthen of sinne he may finde a heauenly comfort and assurance of the fauour of God for if thou seest a man truly humbled him will I consider saith the Lord.
this is foolish curiositie or to be knowne this is vanitie or to gaine by this is couetousnes but to edifie our selues this is wisdome and to edifie others this is charitie The woman of Samaria had no sooner a knowledge of Christ Iohn 4 but thee runnes into the Cittie leau●s her pitcher and saith Come see a man that hath told me all that I haue done Is not he the Christ Am I my brothers keeper was Kayns speech Gem4 But he that belieueth in me saith Christ out of his belly shal flow riuers of the water of life ●o●● I will m●dit●●e Three things saith Luther make a good diuine Prayer affliction meditation this last is as the chewing of the cud which we reade of in L●●●t●cus Meditation without reading is often erroneous reading without meditation makes a barren student In thy wonderous workes Or wonders that is either of those wonderfull things that are contained in thy law as verse 19. of this Psalme and verse 129 which being high and hidden mysteries did cause him to haue them in admiration and reuerence or of those wonderfull workes which God before had done in the world and daylie did amongst the sonnes of men and which ought to be had in perpetuall remembrance Note we first first that Gods word is wonderfull because it containeth in it such things as transcende the reach of mans capacitie and without illumination from aboue cannot be vnderstood by the wisest in the world But especially if we consider the power of this Word in that it is that immortall seede by which we are begotten againe that sincere ●ilke by which wee are nourished that siluer Trumpet by which wee are awakened that Christ all glasse in which wee may behold what manner of persons we are and that mighti● arme of GOD by which we are corrected for sinne and protected from sinne we must needes say that this Word is wonderfull Giue mee a man as lasciuious as a Goate as rau●●●●● as a Wolfe as couetous as Hell as prosu●e euery way as the prodigall sonne if this Word assisted by Gods spirite seize vpon his soule it will chaunge him as if hee were a newe man and to say as one once did to his wanton louer it is not I. Now as for the workes of God whether wee looke vpon them in the creation or preseruation of them they are euery way wonderfull Dauid could not looke vpon them but hee cryeth out Psal 8. O Lorde how wonderfull are thy workes throughout the worlde And Psal. 139. But considering the frame of his owne bodie he saith I will praise thee O Lorde for I am wonderfully and fearefully made ¶ Vers. 28. My soule melteth for he●●ines raise me vp according vnto th● Word ME thinks I see Dauid here resolued into teares and pouring them out at his cies as at ● well with two buckets by reason that the hand of God was heauy vpon him Hee can find no comfort but in the word of God therefore he to be raised vp by it be taketh himselfe to this ciaculatory prayer He thought it not enough to say My soule cleaueth to the dust vers 25. but here wil he adde that it melted for heauines The spirit of a man may beare his infirmities but a woūded spirit who can beare saith the wise man Prou. 18 14 There is much in this booke concerning afflicted consciences therefore I need not to adde much In all those sorrowes which the soule hath arising from the consideration of Gods wrath for sinne the first consolation is from the word of God in which is promised grace and forgiuenes of our sinnes Thus it will quicken and comfort vs in trouble and assure vs of this haruest that though we sowe in teares we shall reape inioy But because wee can neither apprehend nor apply this word further then wee receiue grace from God wee must with Dauid pray to the Lord that hee would so guide vs that wee wander not vphold vs that we fall not confirme vs that wee funt not encourage vs that wee despaire not and quicken vs that wee dye not This verse requires rather the meditation of a penitent conuert then the Exposition of a learned Diuine as for the wicked they vnderstand not what is here written Though the righteous fall hee shall not bee cast off for the Lord putteth vnder his hand Psal. 37. 24. ¶ Vers. 29. Take from mee the way of lying and graunt mee graciously thy lawe AS before hee prayed to vnderstand the way of Gods precepts so here hee would bee kept from the way of lying and because they whom God keepeth are best kept he therefore continues his prayer to God desiring so to bee instructed by his word that his minde being purged from all vanitie he may be taught to obey Gods word The way of lying is that which the Prophet calleth vaine inuentions Vers. 113. falshood Vers. 163. the way of the wicked Psal. 1. Our owne wayes Ezech. 18. In a word the Prophet here desireth to be confirmed by God against all corruptions in doctrine and disorder of conuersation which Sathan by his wittie and wilie instruments doth seeke to set abroach in the world These are called the way of lying 1. Because they are inuented by Sathan the father of lies 2. They are countenanced by mans witte the store-house of lyes 3. They seeme to bee that which they are not which is of the nature of lyes 4. They are contrary to God and his truth the discouerers of lyes This way of lying before sinne came into the world it was a way so vnknowne to man that indeede it was as a desert wildernesse in the which neuer any foote had tro●e but now it is so broade and wide a way that the most in the world walke in it The heathen by his Idols the Turke by his Alcoran the Iesuite by his newe Gospell the Lutheran by his Contransubstantiation the Protestant by his denying the power of godlinesse the Schismatike by his pretenced puritie haue walked so along in this way that the way of trueth they will not knowe Wee haue wrangled so long about trueth in religion that as hee could not finde Rome in Rome so wee cannot finde Religion in Religion And wee haue cloaked so long trueth in conuersation that true dealing is banished from the sonnes of men hee that will vse it must dye a begger Hijs diebus iam peractis nulla sides est in factis m●l in ore verba lactis fel in corde fraus in factis Helpe Lord for good and godly men doe perish and decay And faith and truth from mortall men is banisht quite away Had we not neede then with this holy Prophet to hate al vaine inuentions but to pray most earnestly with him to the Lord that he will take from vs this lying way and to teach vs that good and olde way in which if we walke all the dayes of our life we shall in the end finde rest to our soules
on as inceptors in Christianitie others walke on as proficients in Christianitie a fewe runne on as absolute christians in the race First Euery christian is the runner Secondly they begin to runne after iustificatiō by faith in Christ Regeneration Before which the shackles of sin hinder their running Thirdly the ende of this race is the ende of their life Fourthly the race it selfe is the way of Gods statutes Fiftly the place for these runners is this present world for in the world to come we neede not to runne we shall then receiue the ende of our faith which is the saluation of our soules Sixtly the marke at which they ayme is Iesus Christ that they may perfectly knowe loue and possesse him and therefore this race is nothing else but a continuall and most ardent desire studie and endeuour to profit in the knowledge faith loue incorporation and possession of Christ. Seuenthly The price appointed for such as runne well is eternall life with Christ in heauen Eightly this race hath in it these degrees maturè properè rectè constanter First maturè begin betime Secondly properé make hast Thirdly recté keepe on right Fourthly constanter continue to the ende All which that we may performe we must resolue First that we haue neuer runne farre enough for this were to dreame of an Anabaptisticall perfection Secōdly we must euer ayme at our marke which is Christ Iesus Thirdly we must forget our ground behinde vs and all those steps we haue troden in it Fourthly we must euer endeuour to that which is before vs. Fiftly we must cast off all impediments in this race Sixtly and lastly let vs consider that when we haue runne heere as fast as we can yet is our reward and crowne in heauen and this will make vs to runne on still When thou shalt enlarge mine heart Some thinke that the Prophet straitned because of his enemies meaneth that if God should graunt him victorie ouer them then his feete should be as hindes feete to runne on in the aboue named way But it is probable he speaketh of that griefe he had at the consideration of Gods wrath for sinne and indeed such sorrowes doe so drawe together the heart that they make a man not onely slowe to doe good but that he cannot moue a foote in this way but if God remoue them and quiet the conscience Rom. 5 1. we are so readie and fit to euery good worke that we will not onely walke in these paths but with great alacritie runne on in the same Nothing can stay vs when that sorrowe is taken from vs no not contempt imprisonment or losse of life THE 5. PORTION ¶ Verse 33. Teach me ô Lord the way of thy statutes and I will keepe it vnto the ende I obserue that in this one octonarie which is not to be found in any of the rest namely that in euery seuerall verse there is a seuerall prayer In the first whereof he prayeth to be taught and then promiseth to take that which God shall teach him He had before resolued to runne in this way but he felt forthwith his owne naturall aberrations and therefore commeth to this guide to be taught Teach me O Lord As the Eunuch in the Acts desires Philip to teach him and a schollet in the schoole his maister to teach him or a stranger in his iourney some guyde to teach him so Dauid heere desires God to teach him It seemes this way is hard to be found by any man and worthie to be found out by all men in which Dauid so often desires to be directed He was no doubt a guide to the blinde an instruct●r of the ignorant and a learned scholler in the schoole of Christ but fearing all his owne wayes and hungring after greater knowledge which is as the principall wheele of a clocke to the rest he still be●aketh himselfe vnto prayer Why then shall we thinke that if he haue once gotten a gli●pse of Gods glory reuealed in his word a sma●ch of that knowledge manifested in his will a tast of that sweetnes which is in his Lawe or some vnderstanding of that way which leadeth to life we haue enough and are of our selues able t● behold that glorie apprehend that knowledge relish that sweetnes or runne on in that way O let vs rather say as Dauid doth Teach me ô Lord. Thus the faithfull after God hath liberally bestowed on them great graces ought alwaies to walke in feare and humilitie knowing that they are subiect to many temptations which they are neuer able to resist vnles he that hath begunne his good worke in them doe make them to continue in the same And I will keepe it vnto the ende It is not enough to begin well but we must goe on this is the comeplement of true pietie righteousnesse Is our garment it must be like Iosephs partie coloured coate downe to the heeles not like that of Dauids Ambassadors cut off in the middest It is the Christians sacrifice and God requires not onely the head that is the beginning but also the tayle that is the ending of this sacrifice Remember Lots wife let vs reade that historie least we our selues become an historie ¶ Verse 34. Giue me vnderstanding and I will keepe thy Law yea I will keepe it with my whole heart Giue me vnderstanding c. We thinke that wisedome is only found amongst the politicians of this world that he who can prouide for himselfe preuent his enemie circumuent his friend and see furthest into the affayres of this world he is the man yea the onely wise man But Dauid here thinks that true wisedome is in vnderstanding and keeping the Lawe of God Moses thought so Deutr. 6. Salomon thought so Prou. 1. 6. Iob thought so chapt 28. 28. and hee that is not of this minde shall one day be enforced to say Alas I haue reiected the word of the Lord and what wisedome is in me Isa. 8. If any one therefore doe want this true wisedome let him as Dauid doth and Iames exhorteth all to doe aske it of him who giueth liberally to all men and vpbraydeth none Iames. 1. 6. And I will keepe it with my whole heart As he promised before p●●seuerance so he promiseth sinceritie The heart is the Christian sacrifice the fountaine of all both good and euill actions and the principall gift which God beggeth at our hands My sonne giue me thy heart It was once ●● saying of the Bishop of Rome when he would giue licence to our English Catholiques to come vnto our Churches and so be present at our prayers Fili da mihi cor tuum s●●ssicit Sonne giue me thine heart and it sufficeth but he hath retracted this his teleration now he will haue all or nothing Our God is not like their God our aduersaries being iudges He indeed requireth the heart because if we bestow it on him we will forthwith giue him all the rest Let vs not thinke that any seruice
dayes because wee attribute so much to ministeriall knowledge and haue felt so little profit by the teaching of the Spirit and seeing we brag so much of faith haue so little loue lastly whereas wee boast of our professiō and yet are so little profited in holy conuersation the Lord for such contempt of his trueth doth now teach vs by deluding spirits and fantasticall deuisers and the lying Familie of loue Wherefore vnlesse we be more enflamed with a loue of the truth and an hatred of heresie than we haue been it may come to passe that as in the Primitiue Church the Gospell of Iesus Christ being preached at the first of men of the lowest state and afterward for the good liking of it was brought to bee preached after the more learned sort euen so heresie now beginning in the vnlearned and ignorant people may by the iust iudgement of God for the contempt of the word take place euen among the best learned For it is as easie for the Lord in his iudgements to send a lying spirit into foure hundred learned men as to suffer the common Israelites to bee deluded therewith so then we haue the mysteries of iniquitie to teach the mysteries of righteousnes and we must learne loue of them which are the abusers of loue Wherefore if wee desire to know Christ crucified by the spirit in his word if wee will know him to be our Prophet our Priest and our King we must be new creatures for the olde things are gone and new things haue succeeded them in their place wee must let loue be laborious in vs and fruitfull in good workes But when wee haue not so good misliking of heretikes wee shall finde them as the grashoppers of Egypt we shall see new and old enemies ioyne together to the great dishonour of our God Oh how I loue thy lawe We haue then in this verse a iust occasion to examine our selues how we profit in the loue of Gods word wherein the Prophet for our example and imitation pathetically protesteth how he loueth the word of the Lord to declare that it was not in outward shew but in inward affection and that he did not indeede delude himselfe as we do in many things he proueth it by effects for that here alone is true wisedome and not elsewhere to bee found Wherefore it shall not bee amisse to gather all such proofes whereby we may see his loue was vnfained and came from the bottome of his heart The first is a speciall hatred that hee had to the contrarie that is to all false religion opposed to the true seruice of God Secondly it may be shewed in the circumstance of the time and that for two causes both in respect of the lawe which then had little countenance and in respect of his person which then did suffer contempt The third is the reposing of his felicitie in the word when either he felt the sweete promises of God or his inward man delighted with the law in that he preferred it before all profit pleasure glorie with which things naturall men are most delighted as also his great griefe of minde when either he felt not such comfort in Gods promises or his inward man not delighting in his word or when he saw any other trāsgressing the same The fourth is his careful vsing of the means which were many namely his conference with Gods children either in reaching his gifts vnto them or in the participating of their gifts with him his praying praysing of God his holy meditations and his vowing with himselfe to keepe the law of the Lord. In that so vehemently he bursteth forth into this speech Oh how loue I the law we are to see his great zeale to compare our selues with it and where he saith 〈◊〉 we are to learne that if we finde in our selues any wearinesse and loathsomnesse to this exercise we are not as yet sound at the heart Concerning this word thy law we may note that he putteth the law of God his loue thereunto for his loue to God for this end because euery man wil say that he loueth God as the Turke the Pope the Familie of loue but few of vs and none of them doe loue his word For is there any heretike or hath bin who perswadeth not himselfe and would perswade others that he loueth God Wherefore to our vse we must know that if we feare the Lord we must feare him in his threatnings denounced by his word if we say we loue him we must loue his promises contained in his truth if we obey him we must obey his commandements reuealed in his will if we will worship him we must worship him according to the prescript rule of his owne ordinances For the first reason which we haue shewed to be the heartie hatred of false doctrine or false religion he saith Portion 15. vers 1. I hate vaine inuentions but thy law doe I loue And in Portion 21. vers 3. I hate false hood and abhorre it but thy law doe I loue And in the fourth Portion vers 5. he ●larly prayeth against it saying Take from me the way of ly●●g and gra●●t me gratiously thy truth Where we see that as the mail of God sheweth his loue to the truth so he sheweth his hatred to lies Neither must we vnderstand here that which he calleth the way of lying for a breach of any particular commaundement but for a generall breach of the whole law of God for a thing opposite to the truth of Gods word so also is it to be vnderstood when the Spirit of God calleth Satan the father of lies that is of fained and forged doctrine both in religion and life as also God is said to be the Father of all truth Now it is manifest I neede not as I thinke to shew this out of the Law nor by the Prophets nor by the example of godly Kings how it is by precept commaunded and by practise vsed onely we will shew a few places in stead of many Deut. 7. vers 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Deut. 13. 6. 7. Zach. 13. 3. Where we may see that naturall loue shall giue place to heauenly loue the second table must giue place to the first and the loue of man to the loue of God Psal. 16. 4 the Prophet professeth that he will not once make mention of their names within his lips For examples we may see Reuel 2. 6. how acceptable it was in the sight of the Lord that the Church of Ephesus hated the heresie of the Nicolaitans and Reuel 3. 15. the Spirit of God reprooueth the Laodiceans because they were neither hot nor cold So grieuous a thing is it in the eyes of the Lord when the world will rather take vp false religion than zealously gainsay it But it may be that their ciuill conuersation and outward courtesie doth much slake our hatred against
with the godly This then is a sure token of his loue to Gods word euen then to esteeme it when of the times it was hated neither is this any true triall or argument of the loue of Gods word to fauour it whilest others doe fauour it but when all formall liking of it beginneth to decay then in truth and constancie to professe it argueth true and constant loue of it And it must not be strāge vnto vs that the Church is often vexed with wicked heresies because it is the infinite iustice of God when men with feare and loue doe not obey the truth in a good conscience whereby they diminish the glorious credit of the childrē of God to giue them ouer to some horrible heresie At what time we may see both the grace of God in giuing strength to his to beleeue euen in the middest of heresies as also the faith of his children euen then to be constant when others reuolt from the truth As to continue in our former example of Dauid First he was taunted when it was said who is this man is it not the sonne of Ishai Then being betrothed and contracted to the eldest daughter of Saul he was deluded and depriued of her Afterward Saul prouoked him with open violence how beit still he perseuered in the loue of Gods truth To applie this to our selues if a man now a daies ●e called a precisian or termed by the name of a Puritane that some worldlings thus reason with him What will you become a Precisian will you giue ouer and forsake your frends and commit your selfe to their companie who are not able to preferre pleasure nor profit you wil you now enter so hard a life and suffer so odious a name Doth it not come to passe that this first blast bloweth vs away Other some can be content to giue their names to God but when they can take no course to get liuing and preferment then they begin to shrinke These men making godlines a gaine will so long worshippe God as they may get profit by it But wee must neither let contempt abash vs nonbenefits allure vs and when all law is against vs and of all wee shall bee troden vnder foote when wee shall be compassed with so many euils that these temptations wil come vpon vs it is better for you to giue ouer than thus to run on and to put your selfe in danger that which hath been in you was but a melancholike humour if you giue place to such affections you may hurt your selfe when all these things shall meete with vs wee must shew our loue by resisting them and cleauing to Gods lawe If we be not Ieroboams yet we may be Rehoboams Ieroboam hee set vp Calues R●●o●o●● a while determined to keepe the lawes of the Lord but afterward he fell to 〈◊〉 exercise This now is a singular triall of his loue who saith of himselfe for our instructiō I haue bin had in derision and the bands of the wicked haue robbed m●●e c. They haue fo●●ged lies and laid snares for mee yet doe I not forsake thy law So that no iniuries could wearie him no contempt discourage him no benefits allure him no subtill daungers make him to quaile in despaire his faith was so sound in Gods word and his loue so pure in an whole heart One thing we haue omitted in the former reason which here must not be left out If we be espoused to Christ in the Gospell we are assured that he will keepe vs from falling or if we fall he will saue vs from lying in our sinnes But leauing this let vs come to the third reason which was the great felicitie which hee felt in the word and the sorrow which he felt in the contrary For the first he preferred the word 1. Before all profit as port 16. 7. I loue thy commandements aboue gold ye● aboue fine gold 2. Before all pleasures as port 13. 7. How sweete are thy promises to my mouth yea more than hony vnto my mouth 3. Before glorie as port 8. 1. O Lord thou art my portion I haue determined to keepe thy lawe And portion 14. 7. Thy testimonies haue I taken as my heritage for euer for they are the ioy of my heart Now because in a spoyle all these things doe meete together Seeing then we are giuen to loue our selues and to make 〈◊〉 a gaine or rather loue the word for gaine pleasure and vaine glorie wee shall see how great a thing it is to loue the word for it owne sake that is because it is the word of God But many will vrge the vse of lawfull things and say Why may I not eate this mea●e may I not weare this fashion may I not put on such apparell they bee lawfull the●● natures I answere that they bee indeede lawfull in themselues and while the●●● are nakedly considered and as they are vncloathed of other circumstances yet wee are to a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with meditating on things conuenient least we turne the libertie of the Spirit to a 〈◊〉 of the flesh See here how wee loue pleasures more than the word Some are godly so long as they can get gaine by their godlinesse who quickly can be cold when they haue gotten greater preferment in the Church of God They forget that which wee must remember that wee must grow in zeale in loue in affection and indiligence as wee ●●rease in outward things that we may shew our selues not so much to seeke after profit as after a better life not vaine pleasure but pleasure of the minde not carnall glory out the hope of Gods kingdome On the other side wee are to see how his afflictions grew when hee sawe the neglect or contempt of the law in others for his eyes failed his heart was 〈◊〉 his spirit panted his fleshe parched away Thus whilest hee measured himselfe by the word how his inward man ebbed and flowed in a delight of the word his ioy increased and decreased with the estate of the mind insomuch that hee desired for no other end to liue than to feele the comfort of Gods promises and his affections gouerned by the word of God For he saith portion 3. 1. Be beneficiall vnto thy seruant that I may liue and keepe thy word Wherein he agreeth with a saying of Paul Galath 2. 20. I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in mee But I feare that I speake mysteries and paradoxes vnto a great many who yet are but naturall men and may learne these things of simple men in the country Well let vs learne if wee cannot bring foorth 100 folde yet let vs bring foorth 60 folde if not so much yet at the least 30 folde vnlesse we be either stonie ground who for want of roote in time of tribulation and persecution will be offended or as the thornie ground being choked with worldly cares or as trampled ground which is troden of all men And here
contraries This argument is often vsed in the Scriptures as Psalm 145. Doe not I hate them c. Zachar 2. Tit. 2. 1. and most plainly 1. Cor. 6 What fellowship is betweene light and darkenes c. This is needfull for men to knowe that they learne to hate superstition and heresie and to roote it out least whilest with Saul they spare wicked Agag they persecute righteous Dauid If a man hate false religion hee shall neuer be infected with it for if they be perswaded that it will hurt them then they will keepe themselues far from it A man when hee seeth a toade or any other hurtfull beast he will be sure to keepe him farre from it neither will we euer receiue for meate that we know to be poyson so if wee beleeue that Poperie and Heresie are poyson then we will not receiue them But if men thinke fauorably of Heretikes and call them honest men and well dealing men then it is very easie to intangle such a one Herein doth the coldnes of the loue of Gods law in vs appeare in that we doé so coldly hate the false Because loue setteth the price on things and hatred maketh vs far from them therfore if we will continue in the truth we must loue it and if we wil auoide the false we must hate it And we must not be deceiued by the outward shew of an honest life for if comparison be made betweene Gods children Heretikes when they are both in prosperity or both in aduersitie then we shall see the difference betweene them for otherwise there is no comparison to be made when they are one in prosperitie and another vnder the crosse When the children of God are in trouble and in affliction the graces of God doe manifestly appeare in them for first they haue such spirituall wisedome vnderstanding that euen poore simple soules in the countrie are able to answere the great and learned men of the Vniuersitie so that they be not able to withstand the Spirit that speaketh in them Againe their boldnes and courage in the truth is such as that they be not ashamed to speak euen before Kings the mightiest of their enemies But Heretikes how far are they from this wisedom when they come to answere they either say nothing at all or else their reasons are so blockish and without sense that a childe would marueile at their folly and though they set some face and shew vpon them yet if they be vnripped and then referred to their heads they are but vanitie As for their boldnes and courage it is nothing for if they speake to some simple man or in some secret place then will they be bold to speake their pleasure but call thē to the place of iudgement or before them that are able to call them to accounts then their answeres are to seeke And here of it commeth that they are periured vnfaithfull not men of their word but dastards and cowards and such as will not stand to the truth In suffering there is a great diuersitie betweene them for if the childe of God come to suffer he is neither effeminate to account the paine too painfull neither yet blockish without sense and feeling in suffering but he feeleth the smart and bitternes of it and yet feeling Gods fauour he ouercommeth it And this is true patience indeed when men feele the paine to be grieuous and yet through the hope and feeling of Gods fauour doe ouercome it and in suffering they can pray for their persecutors and can be contented to shed their blood for the conuersion of those that seeke their subuersion and ouerthrow Deale Heretikes thus or doe they not cleane contrarie Yes for in their suffering they are either as men without sense bereaued of their wits so they are rather blockes and stones than men and their suffering is blockishnes and not patience or else they are effeminate and womanish to howle and crie out in their paines and to die with cursing and banning and all kinde of railing Thus they deale This experience haue we seene of both euen within our daies If you compare them together when they are both of them in prosperitie and if you then consider their liues you shall also see that there is great difference For the children of God whilest they loue the word the Sacraments and discipline they cannot long lie and continue in any sin for the word will rebuke them the Sacraments will admonish them and discipline will also helpe to bring them from it but the wicked liue and lie as in a dead sleepe in sinne in prosperitie and will not be wakened He doth not onely speake of corruption in doctrine but also in manners as in euery commandement we cannot loue the good but we must also hate the contrarie as in lust adulterie c. as Ioseph hated his Mistresse when he once perceiued that she was vncleane Then whilest men are giuen to vanitie on the Sabbath they loue not the Sabbath for if they did they would either take heede of such or if they fell into them they would recouer themselues Then we cannot loue the Sabbath vnlesse we delight in it and hate the contrarie Then if we will trie whether we loue the word let vs trie it by the hatred of naughtines in vs and this if we feele we may be comforted for God will worke by this The word thoughts is a metaphor from the crooked boughs of a tree and signifieth that as the trees haue their boughs spread abroad crookedly so doe thoughts grow out of men And his meaning is that he hated these ouerthwart thoughts Therefore he laboured not onely for the outward hatred but euen the imaginations that are contrary thereto as the thoughts of idolatrie vncleannes c. and to these all he biddeth battell that he may loue the law This is a good thing for vs for though we come not to idolatrie murder adulterie c. yet the euill thoughts come into our mindes and these we must not suffer to be setled but at the first we must hate them and driue them out Thoughts are not free therefore neither it is enough to loue in shew but we must also loue in thought for if we fauour them wee may by little and little bee carryed away For hereof it commeth that men are brought to reuenge and other euils because they make not cōscience of the thoughts Thus we see that men haue thoughts of herefie anger c. and yet they are not at defiance with them therefore they fall into the sin Hereof men fall into adulterie become enemies to God his Ministers and religion for whilest they make no conscience of thoughts they fall into the sinnes It is true then that we must first fight against reason when wee will fight against sinne as a man fighteth not against swearing because not against anger and not against anger because not against reason Vers. 114. Thou art my refuge and
is it to giue vs his truth to enrich vs with his Gospell and to blesse vs with such abundance of temporall things Oh that this were knowne of vs oh that euery man would say Oh Lord what am I that thou shouldest shewe mee such mercie to giue mee the enioying of thy word and Gospell more than any other and giuing it to mee makest me to vnderstand it aboue many oh what am I that thou shouldest offer to mee this goodnesse I was borne and conceaued in sinne I haue multiplied and enlarged my corruptions both before since my calling my vnthankfulnes is great my vnworthines therefore greater and yet thou hast not ceased to preferre me in mercies before many If we consider the fearefull iudgements of God in consuming all hypocrites who will not say that many haue beene called and few chosen When we shall see I say in the day of the Lord his seuere iudgements to tread downe these hypocrites and cause them to goe from his presence to hell oh how wil we esteeme that we are in Christ and say Oh how loue I thy law For I see thy iudgements are equall and thou dealest not with me in iustice but in mercie not in anger but in loue not in wrath but in pittie therfore they couenant is sweete because I haue deserued thy iudgements and thou hast spared me Vers. 120. My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraide of thy iudgements HEre may seeme at the first to be some contrarietie betweene feare and loue sith loue causeth not but casteth out feare For he had saide in the verse going before that hee loued the testimonies of the Lord and here he saith that his flesh trembled for feare Wherefore at the first sight here is some shew of contrariety but indeed there is none For he saith My flesh trembleth c. whereby he sheweth that as he loued the law of God in his inward man and with his part regenerate so it is the outward and olde man and the part vnrenued which is full of corruption that did feare So that as hee had Gods spirit to renue his minde hee had this witnesse in him that he did loue the promises of God but because his flesh rebelleth against the Spirit and hee found many corruptions of nature remaining in him and threatning him that after hee was like to fall againe if the Lord yea but a little should leaue him he saith I am afraid least for my vnthankfulnes and vnworthie refusing of thy mercie thou shouldest leaue me to my selfe and so shouldest make a way to thy iudgements Thus there is an harmonie in the Prophet for because as the flesh hath a trembling feare so the spirit reioyceth Thus as wee haue often heard Gods children finde to their comfort in themselues faith in Gods promises and a delight in his word sometime they are grieued for the absence of this sweetnes of faith in the same For as the presence of Gods spirit bringeth ioy so the absence thereof feare as faith breedeth a loue of Gods promises so infidelitie maketh vs afraid of his iudgements Although Noah had great cause to loue the promises of God for his wonderfull deliuerance so he had great cause to feare himselfe that he might haue fallen afterward Lot also hauing good cause to beleeue and embrace the couenant of God for his safegard had iust occasion also to haue suspected himselfe that he was subiect to falling It is said Prou. 28. 14. Blessed is the man that feareth alwaies but hee that hardeneth his heart shall fall into euill For where feare is not there is securitie securitie breedeth hardnesse of heart and hardnes of heart bringeth Gods wrath Wherfore the Apostle writing to the Philippians shewing that God worketh in vs both the will and the deede of doing good least hereby they should draw to themselues security addeth that they must fill the course of their saluation in feare and trembling For if wee doe only well by Gods grace working in vs wee are much to feare the absence of it Wherefore wee see how the man of God did iustly feare his part vnregenerate This feare of Gods children differeth much from the feare of the wicked for it bringeth vs to the Lord and driueth vs not from the Lord it helpeth and hindreth not our prayers it hurteth not but furthereth our duties For it maketh vs to feare least wee should lose Gods grace it causeth vs to waite more and more to haue it and hauing it moueth vs by prayer to continue it When Noah had Gods fauour he feared and being warned of God as Heb 11. 7. of the things which were as yet not seene moued with reuerence prepared the Arke c So Habacuk hearing of the iudgement of God which should fall vpon the faithfull by the Chaldeans saith H●b 3. 16. My bellie trembled my lips shooke at the voyce rottennes entred into my bones and I trembled in my selfe Paul said he preached with feare and trembling Thus wee see how the good Saints of God did feare because they knewe that if the Lord should enter into iudgement with vs no flesh should be saued and that there was nothing in them but of mercie and therefore they acknowledge their weaknes vnworthinesse and wretchednesse Wee see also that Gods children haue diuers affects according to their diuers estates and though sometimes they are quickened through faith other times they are most ready to sinne if they doe not sinne No maruell then though the children of God feare when they see that God restraineth their will the greater their feelings are yet are they mixed with a reuerent feare of Gods maiestie and sight of their own corruptiōs least they should not abide his glorie and least they should not continue in their good things We see moreouer that this feare humbled Noah that the Prophets Apostles spake in feare which the Lord gaue vnto them either to prepare them to some grace which they should receiue or else more zealously to keepe some grace which already they haue receiued And where it might be obiected that loue casteth out feare wee must vnderstand of that seruile and excessiue feare which driueth vs away from God And seeing though wee feele Gods loue by faith wee will feare then much more had we neede so to doe when by infidelitie wee feele not this loue So wee must haue both feare to prepare vs to grace and wee must haue loue to continue vs in this grace And surely onely they with whom this thing hath been familiar doe knowe how loue and feare doe dwell together For as blessed experienc● hath taught some that by this feare they haue attained to speciall graces and continued in them by the same so also by wofull experience some haue found that for want ●f this they either haue not t●sted of the grace of God or else not continued in the same PORTION 15. AYN. Vers. 1●1 I haue executed iudgement and iustice
see many men that will come and are driuen to subscribe to these generall speeches That the righteousnes of the Lord is euerlasting so they will easily be brought to discredit the word whereunto they will not stand For the Turke cleaueth to his dreames the Pope to his traditions the heretikes to their reuelations the heathen to their fantasies the worldlings to their policies Thy word is truth 1. As there is one sure and neuer changing righteousnes so I will not clime vp to heauen to seeke for it there I will not goe down to the low places of the earth to seeke it out there neither will I descend into hell for it but I will looke for it in thy word according to that Deut. 30 11. 12. 13. 14. This commaundement which I commaund thee this day is not hid from thee neither is it farre off it is not in heauen that thou shouldest say who should goe from vs to heauen neither is it beyond the sea c. And Rom. 10. 6. Say nos in thine heart who shall ascend into heauen who shall descend into the depth c. Here then is the difference betweene the heretikes and Christians Idolaters will haue Gods word but ioyned with their traditions heretikes will haue the word but with their reuelations But we say that it is all perfit it is a through truth and all truth hauing nothing too much nor any thing too little For it were a disgrace to adde or detract frō it to ascribe excesse or defect to it So the Prophet his sense is this Seeing I goe not to the right hand or to the left though I am contemned yet herein I stay my selfe because thou hast one righteousnes which thou hast certainly set down in thy word how thy children shall be gouerned by it Here we may also see the infinite wisedome and goodnes of God because otherwise what misery should we haue been in seeing so many heads there would haue been so many religions Wherefore the Lord hath set downe one perfit rule to gouerne all wherein nothing is either abounding or wanting Our Sauiour Christ saith Iohn 17. Father sanctifie them thy word is truth Father sanctifie them and seuer them out being thine with the word it is true Saint Iames saith We are begotten by the pure word this is that sword of the spirite which heretikes cannot abide and putteth Sathan to flight and giueth vs an happie issue and speedie out-gate in all our troubles and temptations if wee stay vpon it This doctrine is as necessarie also for manners euery wicked man will confesse the word to be true yet if we come to examine their life they will faile for if they were perswaded that the word were truth how durst they liue so profane such swearers such murderers such adulterers such theeues and such slaunderers So that we must needs confesse that the word for doctrine preserueth vs from heresies and for life saueth vs from many corruptions We must then labour that the word may haue a credit in our cōsciences that we may not onely confesse God to bee true mercifull iust and righteous which euery of-scouring of the world may doe but let vs beleeue that all is trueth mercie iustice and righteousnesse is sufficiently set downe in the word which word the Lord hath set downe for all vs to beleeue and to obey Vers. 143. Trouble and anguish are come vpon mee yet are thy commaundements my delight SEe here is a further thing The sense then of the words is this Seeing thy righteousnes ●s constant and there is one constant rule of it therefore where besides my contemning I feele also trouble I doe not onely forget thy word but also much delight in it See a rare gift in the man of God for this is a singular gift of God not onely in anguish to bee heauily troubled but also to be comforted not to doe good heauily but to doe it cheerefully In that hee vseth as it were a doubling of the word trouble and sorrowe hee sheweth his griefe to bee the greater It is ●n hard matter not to forget God in trouble but a far greater matter then to haue a delight and a pleasure in the word yet so it is that if we can come neere the one wee shall also come neere the other Here is our strength if wee forget not the word and nourish not vnbeleefe ioy and delight will come after because it is the mercie of the Lord inwardly to recompence that which outwardly hee detracteth from vs. Thy word is my delight or my delight is in thy word This is the same that the Apostle reporteth of himselfe Rom. 7 22. I delight in the law of God concerning mine inner man The way to come to this is to fight against vnbeleefe to beleeue the word is most pure and holy It is a singular comfort to vs though our minde be troubled when we should doe good yet to doe it sith after we haue done it it leaueth a pleasure behinde incontrariwise how sweete soeuer sinne is in committing the pleasure will depart but the sting of sinne remaineth with vs still And surely it is a great quickning to a man when hee doth doe well True it is that this quickning commeth from the peace of conscience But when wee cannot onely reioyce in the forgiuenes of sinnes but feele a speciall comfort arise when wee doe well this is a double quickning For what can bee more comfortable then to be fruitfull in good workes in time of trouble When did faith loue patience constancie meekenes and boldnesse more abundantly flourish in the Church than in trouble In prosperitie wee defer and delay from day to day from to morrow to next day to doe well but when the hand of the Lord is vpon vs it setteth vs forward to the worke This then must mitigate our griefe in time of trouble and make vs iealous of our pr●sp●ri●ie because wee are fuller of the exercise of weldoing in trouble than otherwise Besides a preacher may better perswade good things in time of trouble than in prosperitie Well as it is a generall rule in all things that a good beginning is as good as halfe done so as it is in all godlines likewise is it in this part of godlines What is the cause why men cannot come to this ioy in trouble euen because in the very entrance of it they straight forget the word and so they either despaire or vse vnlawfull meanes This is a thing needfull to be considered of For if a man bee in trouble and hath nothing to ouermatch it then his trouble will ouerquel him For why doe men in trouble lay violent hands on themselues but because they haue nothing in their mindes to comfort them therefore they fal to desperate meanes Wherefore Gods children should soone despaire were it not that they felt comfort in the remission of sinnes and stay themselues on a godly securitie in God his promises and prouidence
and in an holy courage to be delighted in weldoing For the godly whose onely stayes in trouble are faith and a good conscience are brought by their affliction to a sight of their sin to a desire to haue them pardoned to a feeling of God his mercy in hearing their prayers to an hatred of their sinnes Thus if we can support our faith in Gods promises wee shall reioyce in trouble When heretikes suffer for their illusions and being taught of man they quickly shrinke but when Sathan deludeth them with strange fantasies they are ready to suffer much Doe we know that heretikes wil suffer for their illusions and shall not wee much rather suffer for the truth And yet we see the Lord maketh a distinction betweene their sufferings our martyrdomes For Christians through faith can sing Psalmes in the midst of the flame heretikes by their roring shewe they haue no such ioy It stands therefore vpon vs euen now to be iealous of our prosperitie to bestow the time which we haue in weldoing and striue against sinne For we shall breake the first wall by this and so come with ioy to the other And as the word is a comfort in trouble so is it a bridle from sinne in prosperitie For as it doth not let vs fall in trouble so also it bridleth vs from sin in prosperitie For to this end we read and heare the word that in prosperity it should subdue sin and in aduersitie it should minister comfort But what is the iudgement of God vpon them that know not the word If they bee in health they seeke for nothing but for pleasures for profit and for gaine and thinke whatsoeuer they do to be lawfull yea admonish a man of his couetousnes by the word yet will hee not repent vntill eyther theeues or fire or some other iudgement of God vtterly consume him but hee will obiect why should I not get riches why should I not maintaine my gaine Admonish a theefe at his libertie of his theft and it prevaileth no more then if ye should tel him a storie vntill wofull experience ●each him the truth of it by the prison or by the halter There is no hope to any profit to perswade the adulterer vntill some plague of God haue wrought vpon him So we see when fire is on our houses when we must goe to prison or yeeld to any other calamitie men wring their hands teare their haire and rent their clothes crying for woe to themselues and saying they cannot liue they wil not be seene in the world they are ashamed to looke their friends in the face and why because they haue no feeling of the ioyes of the life to come they haue no stay on Gods prouidence they feele no comfort in his promises but they curse they moyle and pine away with sorrow If we see then the great mercie of God in staying vs from sinne in time of prosperitie and in aduersitie telling vs that he doth not punish vs in wrath but in loue and as a father doth teach vs the contempt of this world the desire of the world to come faith in his promises patience and repentance let vs reuerently esteeme the word Verse 144. The righteousnes of thy testimonies is euerlasting graunt mee vnderstanding and I shall liue IN repeating the same againe which hee had saide before the man of God here vseth two words the righteousnes of thy testimonies whereas before he vseth this one word thy righteousnes so that he meaneth here nothing els but the righteousnes of God reuealed to vs in his word For they bee called testimonies both in respect that they bee records of Gods loue towards vs as also they are testimonials of our obedience towards God So the words may beare this sense true it is Lord that that part of thy word where in thou hast comforted vs with thy promises is euerlasting and that part of thy word wherein thou hast set downe our duties is also euerlasting And I shall liue That is what doe men desire but life that I may liue therefore in godly pleasure Lord teach me to vnderstand thy testimonies See the man of God doth rest his life in this vnderstanding of the word They then that are ignorant are dead in sin Ephes 2. They sit in the shadow of death Luk 1. they are bound in the chaines of ●●●●● as Paul witnesseth of the widowes that liue delicately For as we cal him a man of death on whom not the Iudge but the law or not the lawe but the fact hath already giuen iudgement so they are subiect to the spirituall death on whom not God but his word or not the word but the sinne hath pronounced guiltie What is then life surely this was life the estate wherein Adam liued before hee fell his other life afterward which now is common to vs is a death and wee in him are all dead For when there was no sinne there was no shame when there was no shame there was no trouble when no trouble no death Wherfore sinne bringeth in shame trouble and death and hath left vs dead spiritually by cutting vs off from God For as a ciuill life is when wee are obedient to the ciuill lawes so we liue in God when wee liue according to his lawe And as he is dead ciuilly that by transgressing the lawes of the realme hath cut off himselfe from the common people so we are spiritually dead when sinne hath cut vs off from God The Prophet Abacuk saith chap. 2. 4. Hee that lifteth vp himselfe his minde is not right in him Where the Prophet sheweth that though a man for a time swel not hauing an vpright heart yet afterward he sodainely vanisheth away as a bubble of water for as a bladder with the wind is soone drawne out so the vngodly with conceit of his reason seemeth to bee puft vp but all is but inconstancie The iust man saith the Prophet shall liue by faith not by workes as some would dreame for all the shift of them that will be righteous in themselues will bee as a bubble of water but the iust man beleeuing the forgiuenes of sinne looking for euerlasting life staying himselfe on the promises and prouidence of God hath true soundnesse in him Hee shall liue saith the Prophet noting perpetuitie of time So the man of God his meaning is I shall liue i. perpetually and for euer Wee see then the great mercie of God that commeth by the knowledge of the Worde in that wee finde how hee deliuereth vs from wrath and taketh vs into his fauour he rescueth vs from sinne and clotheth vs with righteousnes he taketh from vs death and restoreth to vs life But marke who speaketh these words doth this man of God attaine to such an heroicall spirit as to crie graunt me vnderstanding and shall wee thinke ourselues sufficiently rich well sighted and that wee are so well clothed that wee neede no such prayer We are like the Laodiceans
more willingly and easily we are brought vnto If any haue occasion seuen times and often to praise the Lord it is our age who from the abundance of God his blessings should not onely haue our hearts enlarged but also from our aboundance of the heart our mouthes with praises should be filled Because of thy righteous iudgements This is not the onely thing in the word but there are promises and threatnings but the iudgements of God comprehend all in that they are seene as we haue shewed in fulfilling his promises and executing his threatnings True it is we must praise him for the creation of the world for his louing promises made vnto vs but we can neuer see truly the ●rration vntill wee obserue his prouidence neither can we effectually praise him for his promises vntil we diligently obserue his iudgements For then we truely praise God for his promises and threatnings when wee praise him for his executing of them This therefore requireth an experimentall faith and therefore we shal see in all the Psalmes of Moses Deborah Ezechiah Dauid and Esay that it was vsuall to them then to make them whē either they had receiued some notable deliuerance or their enemies had some notable ouerthrow or the Church obtained some speciall benefit As after the deliuerāce by the read sea after they had safely passed through the wildernes and had put to flight the armie of the al●●●●s ●●● what els doth the History which is 〈…〉 of things p●●t ●●ach vs but to praise God by ●●eing God to be such ● 〈…〉 he is in his p●●●is●s Looke what the law generally speaketh of 〈◊〉 concerning these 〈…〉 to be done or l●f vndone either of p●●●●es or 〈…〉 of the Prophets the things done which were com●●unded 〈…〉 to them which did according to Gods 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 forbidden or else the threatnings executed on them which did ●o 〈…〉 mandemēt This we shall see wonderfully to increase our faith if we 〈…〉 of the Prophets with the time of the law If we compare our 〈…〉 our Sauiour Christ Matth 24. 24. that there 〈…〉 Christs 〈…〉 to feare that they which would not learne of the truth shall learne of 〈…〉 We may call to mind how many earnest professors in king Edward 〈…〉 papists in Queene Maries dayes and how many heretofore christians ●● Queene Maries dayes are now become zealelesse worldlings and they that were ●●en 〈◊〉 ●●●●●t height they are growne and wee shall see sufficient matter to praise God his righteous iudgements Againe if we consider the great mercy of God 〈…〉 our country men who were in banishment we shall haue great cause to be thankefull Vers. 165 They that ●●●e thy law shall haue a gre●t p●●●●●ritie or rather shall haue no m●●●●r of offence or occasion of st●mbl●●g and they shall haue no hurt TH●se in se●se agree with that which the man of God s●i●l Port 65. I 〈…〉 libertie for I seeke thy 〈◊〉 In which places the Prophet sheweth 〈◊〉 they 〈◊〉 ●●aue peace in minde and shall walke at libertie not be entangled they 〈◊〉 ●●ue no manner of offence neither shall any stumbling blockes be l●●● in their waies which carefully seeke to obey the will of God This is the benefit of them that know receiue the word in loue that they shall escape dangers doubtes in streights and plagues so that in all th●se they shall finde happie issues and wholsome out g●●e in what streights or troubles they a●● 〈◊〉 They then ●●t walke in this knowledge and loue of God his law shall ●●u● this grace and no man shal be able to take it from them seeing then it is 〈◊〉 in vs●l to be careful of nothing more then to be directed in our plagues ●et most of vs fa●l● in ●●● 〈◊〉 to ●●●● by following too much their owne deuises and not the prescript rule of the wor● Here 〈◊〉 is described the happie estate of God his children that by faith and loue shall 〈…〉 and continually haue the blessing of God watching ouer them in all 〈◊〉 ●o●●gs whatsoeuer tumult come on them yet they shall possesse their soules in patience and not be plunged and ouerwhelmed in these miseries as other men are O most sin●ul●r commendation of the word in working such peace in promising such successe in our affaires and in deliuering vs from all ill things That loue thy ●●● Wee see here is required that faith which worketh by loue for many will say that they beleeue who bewray their want of faith by want of loue It is then that saith which worketh by loue that maketh vs so to delight in the law of the Lord. Herehence commeth so much disquietnes and so many crosse blowes in our at●●mp●s because our faith is so small our loue to the word ●o little When we sh●l 〈◊〉 then the destruction of our mindes so many ditches hedges walles g●ins snares we must consider the chiefe cause to be our want of loue to the word not that it alwayes so appeareth ●● fleshe and blood but that to faith it is apparant which learneth out of the word Iohn 17 In the world ●●●● shall haue troubl●● but ●● me they shall haue p●ace as if our Sauiour should haue saide howsoeuer fl●sh and blood thinke others iudge ouer vs heauen and earth shall passe but his pro 〈…〉 le Yee shall haue peace in trouble for God that hath ●●oken it is no more liberall in promising than faithfull in performing if thē we haue trou●les it is for want of faith loue of the word And as here is a plentiful comfort for them who loue the word so is there a fearful threatning to the wicked which the Prophet Esay in his 47 48. chapters speaketh there is no peace saith the Lord vnto the wicked but the wicked are like the raging sea that cannot rest whose waters cast vp mire and durt In which place after the Prophet had promised this good successe to God his people hee addeth that the wicked shall not bee partakers of it For as the Sea hoysteth vp and is stirred more vehemently with the tempest and winde and being once moued one waue fighteth with another so that in that continuall conflict much froth and filthie scumme is cast and spued out so so soone as any tempest of temptation hath stirred vp a wicked mans minde and one temptation beginneth to fight with another many foming and corrupt affections are spued out which disturbe the peace of the minde and offend all the beholders God his children seeing those troubles to helpe them which hurt the world finde only the truth of this doctrine howsoeuer in time of prosperitie the wicked would seeme to be in as great quietnes as the other But as the deepe sea in a calme day seemeth to be as still as other waters vntill by the tempest of windes the raging of the one make a plaine difference from the other so the wicked doe seeme to haue as great
know a Cains heart from an Abels 5 Consider Gods liking of Timothie Dauid Samuel the Prophet of Prophets who serued God when hee was a childe and so the good King Iosiah These were not trees which blossome when others haue done Let men be neuer so soundly come home it were better they had neuer beene so both for the Churches and themselues for they carrie the smell of the garlike morter still where euer they goe 6 Old men which haue liued loosely in youth haue great diffidence in themselues for they dare not reprehend so sharply as others nor punish so seuerely as they should for that the sinnes of their youth are so in their foreheads and all men see them Many of these are rockes of offence They make Dauid and Salomon proctors of their sinnes which I am perswaded grieueth those soules at this day if there be any sorrow in heauen to heare men alleage them for their sinnes 7 We be taught Esai 9. 17. that when the Lord intendeth to destroy a Common-wealth a speciall note thereof is this He taketh no delight in their youth therefore where young men be dissolute it is a heauie note of Gods wrath to fall vpon his people 8 Such as doe take libertie by Salomons example let them consider it well He was in the prime of his youth well disposed and wise but hauing past to riper yeeres he grew vaine and dissolute Then by Gods free mercie he became a sorrowfull man in his age And he made himselfe a publike penitentarie leauing his Ecclesiastes as a monument of his follie and it may well be called his booke of Retractations This is Salomons experimentall conclusion All is vanitie and vexation of minde This he tried when he had gone through all things he was fame to returne to that wherewith he began His booke confuteth all Pagans best morall wisedome He wanted nothing he had experience of all kinds of blessings that may be found on earth Yet after long experience he found no true ioy in any thing on earth The wise men of this age would say he was too sad or of a melancholike humour and could not vse things well But himselfe answereth the follie of such chap 6 None could haue more ioy nor so much pleasure in them as he had yet he found in conclusion nothing in them but vanitie and vexation of minde 9 Iob was neuer adulterer yet made he a couenant with his eyes because he being cleane in heart would giue no occasion outwardly When Putiphers wife could not preuaile because of Iosephs constancie she was not moued to repentance as she ought considering that her seruant was so faithfull to her husband much more she ought to haue been but contrarily s●e vseth a desperate remedie worse than the fault it selfe namely to seeke his life And this is the end of all vnbridled and carnall loue that in the end it turneth to extreame hatred yea and that more bitter than of them who neuer bare them good will as appeared in that incestuous loue of Ammon to his sister Thamar who afterward hated her exceedingly Let vs learne to feare these vnbridled affections and if we will not haue this issue to come of them let vs make our bond in the Lord that one may draw another neerer to him thereby And this is not onely in this lusting loue but in all other familiarities of men whatsoeuer without the Lord whether it be for gaine or fauour c for when they cannot enioy the things they looke for their loue is turned to hatred 10 Ioseph in his prosperitie would not forsake the Lord to cleaue to his Mistris and now in that he seeth present danger yet he standeth fast Thus on euery side the Lord trieth his children and giueth grace withall to perseuere Out of this we may learne that we neuer know whether we loue righteousnesse and holinesse for Gods cause so well as when we endure some trouble for it Ioseph might haue done this secretly that it should not haue bin knowne yet the loue of God constrained him and the feare of the Lord caused him to refraine from euill Albeit he saw present danger of his life and good name yet because he knew that the Lord which seeth secrets he rewardeth openly therefore he committeth himselfe to the Lord and had rather hazard his good name before men than keep an euill conscience before God And he beleeued withall that the Lord at the last would make his righteousnes as cleere as the noone day 11 Many will not fight or murder openly but if their enemies were secretly deliuered into their hands they would be farre from Dauid who would not hurt the Lords annoynted in the meane time they deuise euill amongst themselues and when they come abroad they vtter it Many doe abstaine from fornication for feare of lawes and such like but they consider not that the Lord seeth their vnchaste mindes and will recompence them Many would be religious but yet vnlike to Sidrach Misac and Abednago who would not for feare of the King so much as consult of the worshipping of the Image But they would seeme to bee more than they are as Ananias and Sap●ira therefore they shall haue the same reward with them for their tempting of God So long then as our hearts doe deceiue vs and these euill desires ouercome vs and we vse vn●odly meanes wee shall neuer stand to suffer any triall We may learne also by Iosephs example euen for the least part of godly life or good religion to suffer persecution and not onely for the chiefe points and parts thereof And as great a signe of a good heart is it for if we should denie the faith or God or Christ all the world would crie out whereas in lesser matters they would hold their peace and therefore so much the greater triall is it if we stand 12 The end of adulterie is beggerie besides that oft such can haue no children by lawfull and chaste wiues Hence it is often that euen great men want children and their houses decay againe the wife requireth it with like whoredome This sinne of all others leaues a brand in mens consciences as theeues at Sizes conuicted of theft and confessing it yet doth it not oft so much trouble them as this of adulterie They crie out of this O adultery brought me to this miserie CHAP. IIII. Of Affection IT is a great mercie of God to haue a large affection of well doing when wee haue good occasion thereof The Lord ceaseth not to offer occasions but wee often cease to haue good affections 2 We must as well see what is against vs as those things that our affections leade vs to therefore must we pray that our hearts may be vpright that wee be not like ●alaam and the Elders that aske counsel of Ieremy So long as we haue to deale with men we set a glosse vpon the matter
lie in sinne without repentance Repentance defined Note The faithfull haue a cortinuall repentaence all their life Gospell defined Penitence repentance how they differ Foure differences betweene the law gospel Rom. 3. 2. The combat of the faithfull Flesh defined The motions and lustes of the flesh The spirit rebukes and restraines euill motions in vs. The liues of the world Sathan how he fights To resist the inward motions and outward occasions of sinne Prayer defined Part of Lords● * The wound of the spirit By the often checkes of conscience we may know what sinnes sway most in vs. Like reason like law Strange workes as Iron mils such like must rest on the Sabbath I wish that these two arguments of the Sabbath and of Tithe were more fully handled by some godly learned Diuines * G●●ealogies Luk ●4 45. The minde cast downe what shall comfort vs Parts to be considered Persons afflicted in minde The courage of heathens not disquieted in minde Papists disquieted in mind● Iob. Dauid Hezekiah Ieremiah Christ Ies●s an example most comfortable for all afflicted conciences True p●ace of minde how comfortable attained Nothing can more disquiet vs if we be at peace with God through Iesus Christ and contrarily c. Vnbeleeuers by violent deaths do not ende but begin their torments A tormented conscience cannot flie from God The second part of the first diuision * Or verieshie that is warie How wise many be to preuent many euils and how few labour to preuent afflictions of minde * Or by law In seeking so greedily for earth and so faintly for heauen we thinke we labour for our peace but we hasten this way into many griefes sorrowes 1. Tim. 6. 7. 8. 9. Ambitious How we may be preserued from the wound of conscience Simile Preseruatiues against afflictions of mind Psal. 25. 1. Cor. 11. 29. Sinnes of youth To glorie in sins of youth Rom. 6. 22. The leauing of sinne is not the repenting of sinne For what causes many leaue sinne Examination of sinnes after our calling Sinnes like sore● Simile Couer not thy sinne Sinnes after knowledge A blessed thing to be awaked and grieued by checkes of conscience Remedie Sinnes of omission Note The negligent vse of the meanes of saluation * Or wakened and quickened Secret corruption Iusticiarie Pharisies Affections fighting against iudgement Examination hard Returne to sins to come * Or in resemblance The godly iealousie of Gods children Take heede to our libertie The diuell tempting The diuell accusing Note Boldnes in plague Zeale What perfection we haue in this life A scrupulous feare Remission of sinne and mortification of sinne goe together Sixe points which must be knit together 1 2 3 4 5 6 The third part of the first diuision The godly afflicted Salue of this sore How to proceede in comforting the afflicted The vaine ●●ifts of some in afflictions of minde Note well Meete comforters P●●● ●● Confession ●● speciall sins Not to eye one sinne onely and to forget the rest Secret motiones vnto sinnes Doubts * Or strēgth Note Two groūds to be remembred in the cures of soules afflicted How to begin with the la● incuring consciences afflicted An Arian executed at Norwich 1 Good considerations in vrging the law to some afflicted 2 In afflictions euer looke to the end Some haue but a confused conceit of their sinnes in their afflictions Mockers and scorners of the afflicted * Or warrāt The feeling of our sinnes an earnest of our regeneration Note The froth of sinne in the regenerate To feele that we would faine loue the Lord. Sinne and Sathan haue lost the sting in Christ. Note How to answere Sathā and sinne in temptations Good feare God as a father pitieth vs. Simile Some vtterly ignorant of the afflictions of minde The state of the wicked which sorrow not for sinne How to speak to our owne hearts in afflictions How greatly to account of our afflictions Prosperitie how dangerous to some Securitie Patience vnder the crosse In prosperitie to remember aduersitie I he crosse sent to exercise our faith Abraham Dauid Ezechias 1 Rom. 8. 2 3 1 Who be righteous and who be not 2 ● Pet. 2. Heb 11. Luke 18. Rom. 4. 3 Psalm 3● Matth. 11. 28. Phil. 3. Luke 18. Rom. 4. Phil. 3. 2. Heb. 4. Gen. 17. Psal. 32. and 129. and 4. Iam. 2. To haue religion in respect of persons False harted Protestants The second note of a righteous man Note Rom. 7. 2. Cor. 12. 7. Prou 4. 18. Phil. 3 15. Heb. 6. Esaiah 28. Reuel 3. Esaiah 28. Heb. 3. 14. Phil. 3 Gods children sometimes linger rather than goe forward Psalm 51. Psal. 119. 8. 6. 10. Psal. 15. 16. How to loue superiours equals inferiours Matth. 10. ● Cor 5. Rom. 15. 14. Iude 20. Gen. 18. Matth. 23. Iam. 5. Dan. 12. Matth. 25. Matth. 5. Psal. 126. 2. Pet. 2. Ezech. 9. 4. Psal. 119. 5. 3. Mark 3. Rom. 15. Psal. 69. Ierem. 12. Th' espousage or betrothing before full mariage knowne by the light of nature A contract is more than a simple promise of mariage How the parties betrothed must be taught to know their duties Note The contracted must remember that God by his good prouidēce brought them together Faith in Iesus Christ. The wisedome and loue of a good Christian in the gouernment of his wife The communiō of Saints The fift commandement The second commandement That loue which breeds by gedly meanes will lōgest endure The third cō mandement * Amos. 7. 16. 17. 1. Sam. 3. 33. The fourth Commandement The fift commandement The obediē●e of the wife to the husband How the husband is to rule his wife The sixt commandement No bitternes between man and wife The seuenth commandement True loue Iealousie Note The eight cōmandement The ninth cōmandement Man wife not to lay opē the infirmities one of another The tenth cōmandement Then hee prayed Iudg. 14. 21. 2. Sam. 13. 13. The inconueniences and commodities of keeping or breaking the Sabbath Popish Sabbath How men prophane the Sabbath The Sabbath the Lords market day He that keepeth the Sabbath keepeth the whole 1 The order of setting downe the doctrine of the Sabbath 2 1 2 3 Doctrine to informe the iudgement must goe before exhortation to moue affections What is generally to be obserued in this cōmandement 5. Lax. 10. Precept Wherefore some commandements haue reasons some none Of the reasons and first of the first reason Deut. 5. 1 1 The Patriarks knew the morall law of God 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A ceremonie is more then a shadow * Note the difference Why the law is giuen to all Christians as the posterity of Adam What it is to sanctifie the Sabbath * How the Sabbath is called a signe that is a document and not a figure Adam also in Paradise had the tree of life for a signe not for a bare figure No figures till sinne came into the world The Sabbath was not giuen